探花视频

Australian National University eyes role in new space agency

Funding for organisation expected to be confirmed in federal budget

Published on
May 3, 2018
Last updated
May 3, 2018
Brian Schmidt, ANU, Nobel

The Australian National University has harnessed the firepower of its vice-chancellor, Nobel-prizewinning astronomer Brian Schmidt, to stake a claim in the country鈥檚 rebooted space industry.

Professor Schmidt said that ANU was poised to play a key role in supporting a new national space agency, reportedly to be bankrolled by A$50聽million (拢28聽million) of seed funding in the federal budget, which will be announced on 8聽May.

The government announced its intention to establish a domestic space agency during an international astronautical congress in Adelaide last September. Australia had a world-leading space industry in the 1950s but allowed it to聽languish聽鈥 a fact that irks the country鈥檚 scientists, particularly after New Zealand launched its own space agency in 2016.

Leaked media reports suggest that the agency will be headed, for the first year at least, by Megan Clark, the former head of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. While a government spokeswoman would not confirm the leaks, academics are treating the funding as a fait accompli.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Professor Schmidt said that ANU already hosted key national space resources and had 鈥渧ast capacity鈥 to support the new agency with its expertise in science, law and policy.

鈥淎s the nation鈥檚 university, we look forward to playing a leading role in [the agency鈥檚] establishment,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have long supported efforts to bring a national focus to space and have worked alongside industry and business partners for many years. We look forward to bringing our extensive cross-disciplinary capability to support the agency.鈥

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Last year, the government appointed Dr Clark to head a review of Australia鈥檚 space industry capability. Her panel handed its report to the government in February, but the document is yet to be released publicly.

Panel member Anna Moore, who directs ANU鈥檚 Advanced Instrumentation Technology Centre, said that the budget allocation would be enough to launch the new agency, establish international partners and help to seed new space businesses.

鈥淢any institutions and businesses are getting their strategy right for how they can jump in here,鈥 she told 探花视频. 鈥淭he ANU certainly has been doing that.鈥

ANU hosts national space test facilities at Mount Stromlo near Canberra and Siding Spring in northern New South Wales. Its researchers are collaborating with Nasa, the European Space Agency, Japan鈥檚 agency Jaxa and other astronautical powerhouses on projects including Mars exploration, gravitational wave detection and monitoring Earth鈥檚 groundwater and ice cover.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Advocates say that space research will have spin-offs in related fields including 3D printing, electronics, cameras and lasers. Last May, the first Australian-built research satellites in 15 years 鈥 constructed by a consortium of universities, including many students 鈥 were released from the International Space Station.

Professor Moore said that a space agency would be 鈥減ivotal鈥 in fostering this sort of activity. 鈥淭he problem with trying to do that at an institutional level is there鈥檚 no front door to the communications, the legal side of it, the finance side of it, the international partnerships. We need that agency to elevate everything we鈥檙e doing and multiply it by several factors.鈥

She said that Australia had about 0.8聽per cent of the global space industry, which was already worth $400 billion (拢294 billion) a year and growing exponentially. 鈥淲e should be at least at 1.8聽per cent, because that鈥檚 where we are in GDP.鈥

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Related articles

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT