Waterloo Region Record

Soyuz mishap won’t deter him

‘It’s a dangerous job, we expect that there’s a risk,’ says astronaut David Saint-Jacques

- SIDHARTHA BANERJEE

MONTREAL — A recent mishap aboard a Soyuz capsule en route to the Internatio­nal Space Station has done nothing to unnerve Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques about his own upcoming mission.

“It’s a dangerous job. We expect that there’s a risk. We expect that not every launch is going to be perfect,” Saint-Jacques said in an interview from Ottawa.

“What matters is to have trust that there is a way out, that there is an escape system that works well, that search-and-rescue efforts are on the ball.”

Saint-Jacques, 48, said those contingenc­ies were on display Oct. 11 when a rocket failure forced a Soyuz capsule with two astronauts on board to abort and make an emergency landing.

Russia has suspended all manned space launches pending an investigat­ion — and the results will give Saint-Jacques a better idea of when his own launch will take place.

The Canadian was slated to fly to the Internatio­nal Space Station Dec. 20 on a sixmonth mission — his first space voyage.

But the exact date is now uncertain and likely to change.

“Once they finish their work, we’ll know whether the launch will happen on time, later or maybe even ahead of time,” Saint-Jacques said.

“We don’t know. We’re getting ready for every option, (and) I’ll be ready whatever happens.”

Saint-Jacques was part of the backup crew for the failed Oct. 11 space flight and was on site in Kazakhstan when fellow astronauts aboard the craft — NASA astronaut Nick Hague and Alexei Ovchinin of Roscosmos — plummeted 50 kilometres to earth.

Parachutes deployed, and neither man was injured, but Hague said it was the closest call of his career.

“The first thing going through my mind was are my friends OK?,” said Saint-Jacques, who was following the launch from the ground.

“Are Nick and Alexei safe? We very quickly realized that, yes, they were.”

He has since dined with the pair, and he describes them as disappoint­ed but in good spirits and ready to fly again.

Saint-Jacques said the key now is figuring out the source of the problem and fixing it.

It was the first aborted launch for the Russians in 35 years and their third ever.

Like each one before, the rocket’s safety system kept the crew alive.

“We need to make sure we maintain confidence in the Soyuz system, which we do,” Saint-Jacques said.

As for Saint-Jacques, he has wrapped up NASA training in Texas and was briefly in Canada this week before returning to Russia to complete his Soyuz training.

The current situation could hamper his planned medical research if there is a reduced crew aboard the space station.

“The main impact going from a standard crew of six to a standard crew of three for a long time, we can’t afford to do as many science experiment­s as we would like to,” Saint-Jacques said.

Gilles Leclerc, director-general of space exploratio­n at the Canadian Space Agency, said the agency should have a better idea about the timing of Saint-Jacques’ trip by the end of the week.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Science Minister Navdeep Singh Bains looks on as David Saint-Jacques speaks with students during an event Wednesday in Ottawa.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Science Minister Navdeep Singh Bains looks on as David Saint-Jacques speaks with students during an event Wednesday in Ottawa.

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