The National - News

The UAE’s space station deal is no surprise

▶ The plan to build the airlock for Nasa’s Lunar Gateway shows the country is a key industry player

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‘Adeep space home, and so much more,’ is how Nasa has characteri­sed its plan for humanity’s first space station around the Moon, Lunar Gateway – a platform the US agency plans to begin assembling in orbit around our nearest celestial neighbour by the end of the decade. The UAE’s Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre will develop and build the station’s airlock, a vital component that will offer a safe way in and out for its residents.

The UAE space agency’s involvemen­t is unsurprisi­ng, given the country’s growing track record of technical achievemen­ts in space science. In recent years, these milestones have included sending two citizens into orbit, training more for future missions, successful­ly building and sending the Hope probe to Mars and developing the Rashid lunar rover. Sunday’s announceme­nt confirms the country’s place as a consistent and valued player in the internatio­nal space sector. It also ensures that the Emirates can be counted among the relatively small group of nations that are engaged in significan­t long-term space projects.

It is an exciting step forward for a project that could see humanity return to the Moon for the first time since 1972. Gateway is a crucial part of Nasa’s Artemis programme, which aims to build a sustainabl­e human presence there. It is envisioned that astronauts will use Gateway for Artemis missions, before descending to the lunar surface using landing modules currently being developed by SpaceX and Blue Origin.

Such co-operation between national space agencies and the private sector, already seen in the multinatio­nal effort to establish the Internatio­nal Space Station, will be reflected in the UAE’s developmen­t of the Gateway airlock, a task that will be carried out by the MBRSC in partnershi­p with internatio­nal companies. This is a major opportunit­y to continue developing local scientific, technical and manufactur­ing talent and is an important part of the UAE’s continuing diversific­ation away from an energy-based economy.

The airlock agreement, although important in its own right, is also part of the region’s emerging space sector, which has come a long way since the launch of the first Arab satellite, Arabsat-1A, in 1985. A new report from the Euroconsul­t agency claims that the Middle East’s space economy “which has tripled over the past decade to an estimated value of $25 billion in 2023” could grow to $75 billion by 2032.

This trend seems certain to continue. A paper published in April last year by the Middle East Institute noted that as part of Gulf nations’ “clear priorities to diversify their economies across forward-looking technologi­es, the space business strongly aligns with the objectives of the GCC member states”.

In the meantime, the work of preparing more Emiratis to go into space continues. The UAE has four citizens in its astronaut corps, any of whom – as well as future members – could be chosen for Moon missions. It is possible that one day, they could enter the door of a lunar space station that was, like them, made in the UAE.

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