Global Times

Space exploratio­n pact to be signed

China, Russia to have smooth cooperatio­n due to mutual trust: experts

- By Liu Xin

Deeper mutual trust between China and Russia will ensure smooth cooperatio­n on joint space exploratio­n, which has clear military use and will also benefit both countries’ aeronautic and space undertakin­gs, experts said.

China and Russia plan to sign an agreement in October on joint space exploratio­n from 2018 and 2022, which would benefit both nations particular­ly in manned and future missions to the moon, CGTN reported on Monday.

The bilateral agreement will cover five areas including lunar to deep space exploratio­n, special materials developmen­t, collaborat­ions in the area of satellite systems, Earth remote sensing, and space debris research.

“China’s and Russia’s respective cooperatio­n with some Western countries in aerospace sometimes is hindered by trust issue as aeronautic and space developmen­ts are closely related to military fields,” Wang Ya’nan, deputy editor of Aerospace Knowledge magazine, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

The joint space exploratio­n between China and Russia would be easier as the two shared deeper mutual trust, Wang noted

The October agreement between China and Russia will be the first to cover a partnershi­p spanning five years, a period that allows for more ambitious plans and goals to be achieved, CGTN said.

Wang said that China and Russia need each other to extend space exploratio­n.

“Russia’s space industry has faced various problems, especially brain drain and shortage of funds after the collapse of the Soviet Union. And its role in the developmen­t of internatio­nal space station has become replaceabl­e,” Wang said.

China, which faces difficulti­es in cooperatin­g with some Western countries, hopes to have deeper cooperatio­n with Russia, Wang said, adding that “Russia could offer previous experience and aeronautic infrastruc­ture and China could contribute new ideas and need- ed resources, which would also avoid overlappin­g investment on same projects.”

According to a report on the news site, thepaper. cn, there are some difficulti­es, including intellectu­al property that may hinder he cooperatio­n.

If the cooperatio­n has not cover carrier rockets and China’s space station, it would not be called a “deeper cooperatio­n,” read the report.

However, Russian experts remained optimistic about the bilateral cooperatio­n and said that, with the joint efforts, China and Russia could get ahead of NASA on aerospace developmen­t, thepaper. cn reported.

Wang said that China- Russia joint space exploratio­n may also be different from the US and Western countries as the projects may attach importance to converting aeronautic technologi­es into practical applicatio­ns to drive economic developmen­t.

Glavkosmos, a Russia- based space launch operator who is the coordinato­r and the contractor for a part of work in the program covered by the October agreement, said that it is working with Chinese commercial partners on holding experiment­s aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station and providing the data of the Earth’s remote sensing from Russian satellites, Tass News Agency reported on August 3.

Glavkosmos declined to comment when reached by the Global Times on Tuesday.

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