Space
summit looks to the future from India
HYDERABAD,
India (AFP) Global space scientists gathered here Monday heard a call from
India to join forces to push the boundaries of technology further and tap the
resources of the universe.
New
Delhi plans to undertake 60 outer-space missions, including one to the moon, over
the next five years, said Prithviraj Chavan, a junior minister in the prime minister's
office, at the opening of the meeting.
India
is seeking advances in satellite navigation, communications, space transportation
and earth observation, Chavan told the 2,000 delegates in this southern Indian
city.
"All
this will provide increased opportunities for commercial and scientific cooperation
with India," said Chavan, standing in for Prime Minister Manmohan Singh,
who is recovering from prostate surgery.
The
delegates, including scientists, astronauts, satellite manufacturers and launchers,
are to discuss how to profit from the expected strong growth in the space industry
over the next decade.
Paris-based
market research firm Euroconsult estimates the sector will grow to 145 billion
dollars over the next 10 years, from 116 billion dollars in 1997-2006, as space-faring
nations launch more satellites and deep-space probes.
Advances
in space exploration can be expensive and risky, said Chavan, adding: "In
the face of many pressing priorities, we can ill-afford the duplication of efforts
and resources.
"The
question today is not whether we should cooperate but rather, can we afford not
to cooperate?"
India
has already launched satellites to map natural resources, predict the weather
and to boost telecommunications in rural areas, and is looking to put its almost
five-decade-old space programme to commercial use.
Mars,
the completion of an international orbital space station by 2010 and efforts to
combat earth-threatening asteroids through space technology top the week-long
agenda in Hyderabad.
Delegates
met under tight security, with hundreds of police deployed at the Hyderabad International
Conference Centre following twin blasts in the city last month that left 43 people
dead.
The
event is taking place 50 years after the start of the space age, which was ushered
in by the launch of the Sputnik 1 satellite on October 4, 1957 by the then Soviet
Union.
Moscow's
lead spurred the United States to establish the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, or NASA, the following year, setting off a Cold War space race
that ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Space
scientists will use the congress to commemorate that pioneering launch, take stock
of how far their industry has come and map future endeavours.
One-and-a-half
decades after the end of the Cold War, the imperative is global cooperation in
exploring outer space and tapping the resources of the universe, said James Zimmerman,
head of the Paris-based International Astronautical Federation.
"Space
activities are challenging, exciting and ultimately rewarding," he said.
"They may be national in character but offer new opportunities for cooperation."
Space
systems are also being used extensively to support intelligence gathering and
military operations on earth.
There
is a risk of extending the world's conflicts into outer space and turning it into
a "battlefield of the future," warned Chavan, the Indian minister.
"The
decisive advantage that space systems provide also makes them vulnerable targets
for offensive action," he said. "In a world engulfed by conflicts and
terrorism, protection of space assets is important."