Artemis Accords, India-US Space Collaboration And How It Relates To ISRO's Missions; Explained
India has decided to join the ‘Artemis Accords’ led by the United States of
America — an effort to put humans back on the moon by 2025. Here’s a look at
the treaty and India’s own moon mission
Washington: ‘Even the sky is not the limit,’ declared Prime Minister Narendra
Modi on June 25, Thursday, while announcing that India has decided to join the
Artemis Accords, marking a leap in Indo-US space cooperation.
“By taking the decision to join the Artemis Accords, we have taken a big leap
forward in our space cooperation,” said Mr. Modi at a news conference at the
White House with US President Joe Biden. India joins 26 other countries who
have signed the non-binding treaty for space exploration of the moon, Mars and
beyond.
As per the joint statement released by the White House, the two nations’ space
agencies — National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and Indian
Space Research Organisation (ISRO) — will jointly send Indian astronauts,
trained at the Johnson Space Centre in Houston, Texas, to the International
Space Station (ISS) in 2024. The statement also mentions India’s signing of
the Artemis Accords to advance a common vision of space exploration for the
benefit of all humankind.
Welcome to the #Artemis Accords, Ecuador and India.
— NASA (@NASA) June 23, 2023
This week, the two nations became the 26th and 27th, respectively, to commit to the peaceful and safe exploration of space as we journey to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.
🇪🇨: https://t.co/5RJ5uZyiOK
🇮🇳: https://t.co/XykAv5CSts pic.twitter.com/HG1d6m4kqF
What Are The Artemis Accords?
Based on the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 (OST), the Artemis Accords were
established by the U.S. State Department and NASA with seven other founding
members — Australia, Canada, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the United Arab
Emirates, and the United Kingdom— in 2020 for setting common principles to
govern civil exploration and use of outer space, the moon, Mars, comets, and
asteroids, for peaceful purposes.
The 27 signatories to the Artemis Accords are the US, Australia, Canada,
Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the United Arab Emirates, the U.K,. Ukraine, South
Korea, New Zealand, Brazil, Poland, Mexico, Israel, Romania, Bahrain,
Singapore, Colombia, France, Saudi Arabia, Rwanda, Nigeria, Czech Republic,
Spain, Ecuador, and now, India.
Commitments Under The Accords
Under the Artemis Accords, the signatories will implement memorandum of
understanding (MOUs) between governments or agencies to conduct space
activities for peaceful purposes in accordance with international law. They
are committed to share national space policies transparently with one another
and scientific information resulting from their activities with the public and
the international scientific community on a good-faith basis.
The signatories recognise common exploration infrastructure including fuel
storage and delivery systems, landing structures, communications systems, and
power systems to enhance scientific discovery and commercial utilisation. The
members will have to render necessary assistance to personnel in outer space
who are in distress.
All relevant space objects must be registered by the signatories and they must
openly share scientific data in a timely fashion. Private sectors are exempted
from sharing scientific data unless they are performing space activities on
behalf of a signatory. The members are expected to preserve outer space
heritage, including historic human or robotic landing sites, artefacts and
evidence of activity on celestial bodies.
The utilisation of space resources, including recoveries from the surface of
the moon, Mars, comets, or asteroid should be done in support of safe and
sustainable space activities. The usage of such resources by a signatory must
not interfere with that of another signatory and information regarding the
location and nature of space-based activities must be shared to avoid this.
Signatories must notify and coordinate with one another to create a ‘safety
zone’ to avoid any such interference.
Members must plan for mitigation of orbital debris, including safe and timely
disposal of spacecraft at the end of missions. They must also limit the
generation of new, long-lived harmful debris to a minimum.
The principles under these Accords must be periodically reviewed and potential
areas of future cooperation must be discussed.
What Are The Activities Under Artemis Program?
The initial three missions of the program are Artemis-I, II and III.
Under Artemis-I, NASA launched its spacecraft ‘Orion’ on its indigenously
built super heavy-lift launch vehicle (SLS) directly to the moon on a single
mission. On November 16, 2022, the SLS carrying Orion commenced its first
uncrewed integrated flight test from NASA’s Kennedy Space Centre, Florida. The
Orion completed a lunar flyby, performing a half revolution around the moon
before returning to the earth’s orbit and splashing down on December 11, 2022,
in the Pacific Ocean.
In 2024, NASA’s Artemis-2 programme will commence, with a crew of four
astronauts onboard the SLS performing multiple manoeuvres on an expanding
orbit around the Earth on the Orion, conducting a lunar flyby and returning to
the earth. The crew will perform tests on systems like communication, life
support, and navigation and perform a proximity operations demonstration which
will help in docking and undocking for Artemis-III.
The four member crew finalised by NASA are Reid Wiseman (commander) from
Canada, Victor Glover (pilot), Christina Hammock Koch (mission specialist) and
Jeremy Hansen (mission specialist) from the US. The mission will create
history by sending the first woman and person of colour to land on the moon.
Currently, the crew is undergoing training while different modules of Orion
are undergoing tests.
Under Artemis-III, humans will return to the moon in 2025. This mission will
witness the four-member crew land on the moon, conduct a week-long lunar
exploration, perform a lunar flyby, and return to earth.
Gateway - An orbital outpost around the Moon that provides vital support for a
sustainable, long-term human return to the lunar surface
In future missions under the Artemis program, NASA aims to land a second
crew on the moon in 2028 and establish a Lunar Gateway station where
astronauts will land in 2029. NASA also aims to set up a permanent base on the
lunar surface and then proceed to send astronauts to Mars.
India's Space/Moon Mission & Role In Artemis
India’s space agency ISRO already had two programs — Chandrayaan and
Gaganyaan — before the country signed the Artemis Accords. Under Gaganyaan,
ISRO will demonstrate its capability for human spaceflight to Low Earth Orbit
(LEO) and a safe return to the earth. The mission has two unmanned flights and
one manned flight planned to the ISS.
ISRO tests recovery procedures for the Gaganyaan astronaut mission targeted to
launch in 2024
While the first unmanned mission was to be launched in 2022, the COVID-19
pandemic delayed the schedule by a year. Now, the first unmanned flight will
happen at the beginning of next year and the crewed mission is projected to be
done by the end of 2024. The four astronauts selected for the mission
completed their generic space flight training at Gagarin Cosmonaut Training
Centre, Russia, and since then have been in India undergoing tests and
physical training. They will be sent for final training to the Kennedy Space
Centre, US, in 2024.
India’s second attempt to ‘soft land’ on the moon — Chandrayaan-3 — is set to
launch in mid-July this year. ISRO chief S. Somnath said that the
Chandrayaan-3 vessel has been moved from U.R. Rao Satellite Centre in
Bengaluru to Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota. The initial operation
checks of the satellites, launch vehicle, orbiter, lander and rover are
ongoing. Similar to Chandrayaan-2, India will attempt to launch an orbiter to
the lunar orbit and land a rover on the south pole of the lunar surface.
With India signing the Artemis Accords, it will be a part of the US’ attempt
to land humans on the moon by 2025. Moreover, ISRO is likely to collaborate on
further Artemis missions including the Lunar Gateway, Mars landing and
establishing a permanent lunar base. India also aims to establish its own
space station similar to the ISS and China’s Tiangong space station.
Hailing India’s decision to sign the Artemis Accords, Ashok GV, Director,
Legal Affairs of Spaceport Sarabhai, an Indian space think tank, said that it
could provide a foundation for more streamlined and liberal exchange of
technology and a flow of capital for India’s space program. “It provides
impetus to India’s aspirations to be a key influencer in humankind’s efforts
to mark its presence in the moon and beyond,” he said.
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