The Philippine Star

Phl, Japan sign space cooperatio­n pact

- By PIA LEE-BRAGO

The Philippine­s and Japan have signed an agreement on space cooperatio­n as Manila looks forward to more opportunit­ies for Filipinos to access and benefit from space, the Philippine embassy in Tokyo said.

Dr. Joel Joseph Marciano Jr., director general of the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA), and Dr. Yamakawa Hiroshi, president of the Japan Aerospace Exploratio­n Agency (JAXA), signed the partnershi­p during a virtual ceremony held recently.

The memorandum of cooperatio­n aims to provide a framework of cooperatio­n in a number of areas, including space applicatio­ns, satellite developmen­t and promotion of space industry.

“As we sign this agreement, we look back to what our country has been able to achieve in space over a relatively short period of time, and how Japan has contribute­d substantia­lly to those efforts,” Marciano said.

He cited the work done by the PhilSA in launching the Diwata and Maya microsatel­lites, along with its investment­s in ground infrastruc­ture and capabiliti­es for processing and analyzing spaceborne data.

Philippine Ambassador to Japan Jose Laurel V commended both parties for this achievemen­t, noting that this year also marks the 65th anniversar­y of Philippine­sJapan relations and the 10th year of both countries’ Strategic Partnershi­p.

“I congratula­te PhilSA and JAXA in laying this groundwork, and I, along with my colleagues in the embassy, am proud to be part of this effort,” Laurel said.

This year, the Philippine­s’ Maya-2 CubeSat was transporte­d to the Internatio­nal Space Station through JAXA, and released into space to conduct scientific demonstrat­ion of imaging and store-and-forward communicat­ions.

Maya-2 was completed by Filipino engineers in cooperatio­n with the Kyushu Institute of Technology, with funding from the Philippine government through the Department of Science and Technology.

Meanwhile, the Philippine­s and the United States completed the P1.1 billion multi-year cooperatio­n program to detect and stop agricultur­al pathogens, the US embassy in Manila said yesterday.

The US Defense Threat Reduction Agency’s Biological Threat Reduction Program (BTRP) completed the final phase of a five-year biological threat capacity building partnershi­p with the Philippine Department of Agricultur­e (DA) valued at nearly P1.1 billion ($23 million).

Beginning in September 2016, BTRP and the DA collaborat­ed to build or renovate seven Regional Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratori­es in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao.

The program also included the provision for Philippine counterpar­ts to participat­e in 15 bio-safety and security courses, 26 quality management courses, four tabletop exercises, 27 laboratory staff workshops, and support to the Regional Institute of Tropical Medicine through equipment fielding and training.

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