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Archive for November 22nd, 2004

Nearly But Not Quite Almost Equivocating

NASA is tentatively sorta kinda considering the possibility of China maybe somehow taking part in the VSE…maybe…sorta…

NASA admits China to exploration discussions

Long shunned as a player in U.S-led international space ventures, China has been admitted to talks with NASA about helping to accomplish President Bush’s goals for exploring the moon and Mars.

With the blessing of the U.S. State Department, a Chinese delegate this week joined representatives from Russia, Japan, Canada and other foreign powers for a NASA-sponsored workshop on the unfolding space initiative.

China’s involvement in the three-day workshop that ended Thursday was a small but highly visible breakthrough in relations with a potential to improve global security as well as advance space exploration, participants and outside experts said.

But they cautioned against reading too much into the session, which drew representatives from 30 countries. More talks are planned for early next year.
“This indicates a very cautious, small first step,” said Joan Johnson-Freese, a national security specialist at the Naval War College in Newport, R.I., who monitors Chinese developments. “The fact we did invite and China did send someone is very good news, but I would not jump to the conclusion there will be a partnership.”

But, don’t read too much into all of this, because, you know, they’re just, like, talking about it. Sorta hypothetical-like. Maybe.

[via Carl Carlsson]

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Ad Astra Per Oratio

Some have criticized the Vision for Space Exploration as having been crafted behind closed doors, without input and guidance from the public, academia, and international partners.

Europe, on the other hand, is taking a very different — and characteristically European — approach in the formulation of a new collective space policy:

The European space council is set to meet in Brussels for the first time on Thursday this week. Ministers who sit on the EU’s competitiveness council will attend the meeting along with ministerial officials from the European Space Agency (ESA).

The meeting is being touted as the first step towards a co-ordinated European space policy, and the announcement from ESA gives an insight into just how much bureaucratic wrangling goes into a project this size.

In brief: the Space Council sessions were first proposed in a Framework Agreement, which was adopted in 2003, and came into force in May this year. This agreement sets out how the EU will develop a coordinated, pan-European space policy. An outline of how the policy might look already exists – it is the result of three years of effort between ESA and the EU, defining objectives and identifying priorities. The final document is expected to be approved at a space council session towards the end of 2005.

The ESA says that an exchange of views will be at the core of the agenda, along with the almost inevitable progress report. The outcome of the meeting will be made public late on Thursday evening.

I can hardly wait for the European space policy counterpart to the VSE to be published…it will be the culmination of a grand generational undertaking, not unlike the return to the Moon itself.

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In Space, No One Can Hear Your Cocktail Order

Looks like someone famous (with an alien connection) will be among the first Virgin Galactic customers.

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