Elon Muskā€™s SpaceX in Talks With ESA to Allow Temporary Use of Its Launchers

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Elon Muskā€™s SpaceX in Talks With ESA to Allow Temporary Use of Its Launchers

The European Space Agency (ESA) has begun preliminary technical discussions with Elon Muskā€™s SpaceX that could lead to the temporary use of its launchers after the Ukraine conflict blocked Western access to Russiaā€™s Soyuz rockets.

The private American competitor to Europeā€™s Arianespace has emerged as a key contender to plug a temporary gap alongside Japan and India, but final decisions depend on the still unresolved timetable for Europeā€™s delayed Ariane 6 rocket.

ā€œI would say there are two and a half options that weā€™re discussing. One is SpaceX that is clear. Another one is possibly Japan,ā€ ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher told Reuters.

ā€œJapan is waiting for the inaugural flight of its next-generation rocket. Another option could be India,ā€ he added in an interview.

ā€œSpaceX I would say is the more operational of those and certainly one of the backup launches we are looking at.ā€

Aschbacher said talks remained at an exploratory phase and any backup solution would be temporary.

ā€œWe of course need to make sure that they are suitable. Itā€™s not like jumping on a bus,ā€ he said. For example, the interface between satellite and launcher must be suitable and the payload must not be compromised by unfamiliar types of launch vibration.

ā€œWe are looking into this technical compatibility but we have not asked for a commercial offer yet. We just want to make sure that it would be an option in order to make a decision on asking for a firm commercial offer,ā€ Aschbacher said.

SpaceX did not reply to a request for comment.

The political fallout from Russiaā€™s invasion of Ukraine has already been a boon for SpaceXā€™s Falcon 9, which has swept up other customers severing ties with Moscowā€™s increasingly isolated space sector.

Satellite internet firm OneWeb, a competitor to SpaceXā€™s Starlink satellite internet venture, booked at least one Falcon 9 launch in March. It has also booked an Indian launch.

On Monday, Northrop Grumman booked three Falcon 9 missions to ferry NASA cargo to the International Space Station while it designs a new version of its Antares rocket, whose Russian-made engines were withdrawn by Moscow in response to sanctions.

Wake-up call

Europe has until now depended on the Italian Vega for small payloads, Russiaā€™s Soyuz for medium ones and the Ariane 5 for heavy missions. Its next-generation Vega C staged a debut last month and the new Ariane 6 has been delayed until next year.

Aschbacher said a more precise Ariane 6 schedule would be clearer in October. Only then would ESA finalise a backup plan to be presented to ministers of the agencyā€™s 22 nations in November.

ā€œBut yes, the likelihood of the need for backup launches is high,ā€ he said. ā€œThe order of magnitude is certainly a good handful of launches that we would need interim solutions for.ā€

Aschbacher said the Ukraine conflict had demonstrated Europeā€™s decade-long cooperation strategy with Russia in gas supplies and other areas including space was no longer working.

ā€œThis was a wake-up call, that we have been too dependent on Russia. And this wake-up call, we have to hope that decision-makers realise it as much as I do, that we have to really strengthen our European capability and independence.ā€

However, he played down the prospect of Russia carrying out a pledge to withdraw from the International Space Station (ISS).

Russiaā€™s newly appointed space chief Yuri Borisov said in a televised meeting with President Vladimir Putin last month that Russia would withdraw from the ISS ā€œafter 2024ā€.

But Borisov later clarified that Russiaā€™s plans had not changed and Western officials said Russiaā€™s space agency had not communicated any new pullout plans.

ā€œThe reality is that operationally, the work on the space station is proceeding, I would say almost nominally,ā€ Aschbacher told Reuters. ā€œWe do depend on each other, like it or not, but we have little choice.ā€

Ā© Thomson Reuters 2022


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