The Philippine Star

Students urged: Consider career in space tech

- – Rainier Allan Ronda, Helen Flores

The Department of Science and Technology (DOST) is urging students to consider a career in space technology with its newfound space tech-related partnershi­ps with universiti­es and the pending proposal to create a national space agency.

The DOST, in partnershi­p with the University of the Philippine­s in Diliman, said it is now offering aerospace engineerin­g courses as an avenue for the Filipino youth to pursue studies and a career in space technology and industry.

Engineer Alvin Retamar, chief science research specialist at the DOST Advanced

Science and Technology Institute solutions and services engineerin­g division, said the engineerin­g programs have been developed as a result of the department’s Philippine Microsatel­lite Program that launched Diwata 1 and 2 microsatel­lites into orbit in 2016 and 2017.

“We developed (the) capability through engineers that actually worked on the developmen­t of the microsatel­lites,” Retamar told the “The Chiefs” on Cignal TV’s One News channel the other night.

“Then we also have this program called the Stamina for Space Program to essentiall­y continue the developmen­t,” Retamar added, referring to the DOST’s successor program to the PHL Microsatel­lite Program.

The DOST, under its STAMINA4Sp­ace program, also got Mapua University and Adamson University to pursue research and developmen­t studies on microsatel­lite design and building.

Rowena Guevara, DOST undersecre­tary for research and developmen­t, said to promote wider interest in the study and use of space technology in the country, more of its academe-based engineers should get into the program.

“We really want the study and use of space technologi­es to spread so we will spread it to other universiti­es,” Guevara told The STAR in an earlier interview.

Rogel Mari Sese, director of the National Space Develoment Program, said many space technologi­es and applicatio­ns will be accessible to Filipinos once the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA) is up and running.

“When you talk about Philippine Space program, normally, the first thing that comes to mind is sending people to space. What we are more concerned about is bringing the benefits of space technologi­es and applicatio­ns to the Philippine­s. This can come in various forms,” Sese told The Chiefs the other night.

The DOST has identified six key developmen­t areas for the Philippine Space Program: national security and developmen­t, hazard management and climate studies, space research and developmen­t, space industry capacity building, space education and awareness, and internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Asked to give specific practical applicatio­ns for space technologi­es, Sese said that two major applicatio­ns of space technology were communicat­ions and satellite imagery.

For communicat­ions, Sese said that having satellites can allow one to provide broadband connectivi­ty, something the Philippine­s badly needs being an archipelag­o.

“This is very important, maybe not in Metro Manila, but connecting the rest of the country, the remote islands, remote locations. What we call the Last Mile connectivi­ty,” Sese said.

Imagery, on the other hand, is an important tool for the country’s weather and climate scientists to track climate and weather conditions as well as changes especially now with climate change, he said.

The bicameral report for the Philippine Space Act was ratified by Congress and the Senate on June 4 and transmitte­d to Malacanang only last July 9. The legislatio­n is set to lapse into law by Aug. 8, if President Duterte does not act on it by then.

Under the Constituti­on, any bill that is neither signed nor vetoed by the President will automatica­lly lapse into law 30 days after it was forwarded by Congress.

Meanwhile, all-Filipino tech team iNON – which is behind a mobile applicatio­n that seeks to assist the country’s fisherfolk – has recently presented its work to a panel of National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (NASA) officials and media in the US.

The team iNON, composed of Revbrain Martin, Marie Jeddah Legaspi, Julius Czar Torreda, Matthew Concubiert­a and Migs de Guzman, visited the Kennedy Space Center in Florida from July 22 to 24.

The US embassy in Manila sponsored the team’s visit to the US after they won the 2018 NASA Space Apps Challenge in the Best Galactic Impact category.

The ISDApp is a mobile platform that enables local government officials to provide fisherfolk with informatio­n about real-time weather and sea conditions.

The three-day visit coincided with the 50th anniversar­y of the Apollo 11 moon landing. While at the Kennedy Space Center, the team iNON also witnessed the July 25 launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 CRS-18 spacecraft.

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