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EU and ESA Space Council Meets 26 September 2008

By [email protected] - 26th November 2008 - 16:19

European Ministers in charge of space activities within ESA and European Union Member States met in Brussels on 26 September 2008 for the fifth Space Council [1]. The Space Council is the joint and concomitant meeting of the EU Council and of the ESA Council at Ministerial Level, as defined in the Framework Agreement between the European Community and ESA, which entered into force in May 2004. The Space Council first met in November 2004, followed by two meetings in 2005 and one in 2007, at which the European Space Policy was adopted.
Jointly drafted by the European Commission and ESA\'s Director General and adopted in May 2007, the European Space Policy outlines the strategic guidelines for Europe\'s future activities in space. The policy calls for a strengthening of Europe\'s strategic approach to space and increased coordination in activities between the EU, ESA and their Member States and is supported by the European Space Programme, as a planning and strategic tool comprising all of Europe\'s major space activities. Commenting on the outcome of the 26 September meeting, Maria Van Der Hoeven, Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs and current Chair of the ESA Council at ministerial level, said:\"The Space Council has welcomed the progress made in the implementation of the European Space Policy over the last 16 months, and has identified further priority areas for its implementation. It is important that we maintain momentum. In particular, Europe needs to ensure that it delivers the flagship satellite applications programmes Galileo and Kopernikus. The Council has set out the requirements for an action plan on Kopernikus implementation, which should include sustainable funding, operational service delivery mechanisms, an approach for the overall governance of the system and of all its components and a comprehensive data policy. We will then address new priorities from a position of strength.Europe now has a stable foundation for its space activities, supported as they are by the three legs of the European Space Agency, the European Union and their respective Member States. This will be reinforced not only by today\'s meeting but also by the ESA Council at ministerial level, which is due to take place on 25-26 November in The Hague.\"The Space Council adopted a Resolution which highlights the significant advances in the two initial priorities and flagship space programmes of the European Space Policy, Galileo and Kopernikus. ESA acts as the European Commission\'s procurement and design agent tasked with the deployment by 2013 of a global navigation system composed of 30 dedicated satellites and a ground infrastructure with the main control centres in Europe and a network of dedicated stations deployed around the world. Within Kopernikus, formerly known as GMES (Global Monitoring for Environment and Security), ESA plays the role of development and procurement agency for the space component through the Sentinel family of satellites and for the related ground segment. ESA is also the coordinator for all data access to the Sentinels and other missions, essentially those run by its Member States and Eumetsat. The Space Council identified the need to draw up a plan that provides for sustainable operational funding for Kopernikus and welcomed the proposal by the European Commission to start this with a new preparatory action in the preliminary budgets for 2009. As to the R&D phases of the programme, the Council welcomed the ESA Director General\'s intention to submit to the Ministers of its Member States, gathering in Council in The Hague in November of this year, a proposal for the subscription of the second segment of the Kopernikus Space Component that will make it possible to complete the development of most of the initial series of Sentinel satellites. Regarding horizontal, cross-cutting aspects of the European Space Policy, the Space Council identified the need to further promote international cooperation in such domains as solar system exploration, Earth environment and sustainable development. The Resolution also addressed the need to strengthen existing mechanisms for coordinating European expertise and investments in space as well as to set up mechanisms to improve synergies between civil and defence space programmes, respecting the specific requirements of both sectors, including their decision-making competences and finance schemes.This Space Council meeting has also moved to widen the scope of and establish new priorities for the European Space Policy. Four additional priority areas have been identified: space and climate change, contributions of space to the Lisbon Strategy, space and security and space exploration.The Space Council welcomed in particular the joint preparation by ESA and Eumetsat of an innovative programme proposal for Meteosat Third Generation, which will also contribute to Kopernikus, to the monitoring of climate and thus to the detection of global climate change.The Space Council recognised the substantial contribution of space, as a high tech R&D domain and through the economic exploitation of its results, to attaining the Lisbon goals and fulfilling the economic, educational, social and environmental ambitions of Europe and the expectations of its citizens. The development of services that seamlessly integrate navigation, observation and communication satellite systems and combine them with terrestrial networks will be promoted and accelerated.At the end of the 5th Space Council, ESA\'s Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain said: \"Europe\'s Ministers have renewed the momentum behind the European Space Policy. The European Commission and ESA are committed to delivering the flagship application programmes Galileo and GMES - now known as Kopernikus, which are crucial to the economic and environmental well-being of Europe and elsewhere. Beyond these first priorities, Ministers have given us clear orientations as to their next priorities. It is particularly significant that they have stressed their wish for ESA to be involved in the structured dialogue on space and security and for the Commission to address the political debate on Europe\'s vision for its role in the exploration of space.\"Notes: [1] The 17 ESA full Member States are: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Canada takes part in some projects under a Cooperation agreement. The Czech Republic is in the process of joining ESA as a Member State. Hungary, Romania and Poland are âEuropean Cooperating Statesâ. Estonia and Slovenia have recently signed cooperation agreements with ESA.

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