The Star Malaysia

Japan extends Internatio­nal Space Station participat­ion to 2030

-

TOKYO: Japan will extend its participat­ion in the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) programme to 2030, education and science minister Keiko Nagaoka said, following the footsteps of ally the United States.

The United States pledged in December to keep the ISS operationa­l through to 2030.

Among Washington’s programme partners, which are Russia, Canada, Japan and the 11-nation European Space Agency, Tokyo is the first to join the United States in extending participat­ion.

The space station, a science laboratory spanning the size of a football field and orbiting about 400km above Earth, has been continuous­ly occupied for more than two decades under a partnershi­p led by the United States and Russia.

Japan’s announceme­nt comes just days after Nasa’s next-generation moon rocket blasted off from Florida in a crewless voyage inaugurati­ng the US space agency’s Artemis exploratio­n programme, in which Japan is also participat­ing.

“ISS is inevitable as a place to verify technologi­es for the Artemis programme. It is also an important venue for Japan-us cooperatio­n,” Nagaoka said at a signing ceremony for a Japan-us agreement on cooperatio­n for a lunar space station called Gateway.

Under the agreement, a Japanese astronaut will go aboard Gateway, which is under developmen­t for the Artemis programme, and Japan will supply batteries and other equipment for that space station.

US President Joe Biden and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida in May confirmed their intention to include a Japanese astronaut in the programme, including its lunar surface missions.

“We will maintain close cooperatio­n with the United States to realise a Japanese astronaut’s landing on the moon in the second half of the 2020s, which would be the first for non-americans,” Kishida said in a message at the ceremony.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia