Business Spotlight

Not lost in space

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billion [(biljen] , Milliarde(n) blatantly [(bleit&ntli] , offenkundi­g CEO (chief executive officer) [)si: i: (EU] , Direktor(in), Leiter(in) game [geim] , hier: Regeln mining industry [(mainin )Indestri] ,Bergb au( indus trie) speak up for sb. [)spi:k (Vp fo:] , jmdn. verteidige­n turn a blind eye (to sth.) [)t§:n E )blaind (ai (tu:)] , (über etw.) hinwegsehe­n The Australian Space Agency, formed in 2018, has a budget of just over A$ 41 million (€26 million) — spread over four years. That doesn’t worry the agency’s CEO, Dr Megan Clark. She plans to increase the industry’s value to at least $7 billion a year by 2030.

Clark started her career as a geologist in the mining industry. At the time, women were not permitted to work undergroun­d. “The game was then that if a mines inspector came, you came up to the surface, and as long as they didn’t see you working undergroun­d or as long as you weren’t ‘blatantly’ working undergroun­d, they would sort of turn a blind eye,” she told The New York Times. “And I just thought that lacked integrity: ‘This is what I do, and I’m not going to hide from that.’” When an inspector caught Clark working undergroun­d, her boss was told either to fire her or put her in a different job. Instead, he spoke up for her; the law was changed in 1986. Clark says she receives a lot of letters from children who are filled with curiosity about space. “Some people get [that curiosity] beaten out of them, but some people don’t, and they end up in the space sector.”

 ??  ?? Eyes on the stars: Dr Megan Clark
Eyes on the stars: Dr Megan Clark

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