Wednesday, 27 December 2006

Not for sale

Russia Won’t Transfer Space Technology”: via NASA Watch, seems like Russia is at long last realizing that selling off its space technology to China may not be in its best long-term interests. About time! Russia has sold too much in the last decade.

Some resent the way in which the rocket program’s family silver has been sold off at bargain basement prices to rivals who stand to gain huge profits from their lifetime’s investment. The joint ventures have drawn criticism that they will lead to a brain, patent and knowledge drain to the United States and that the once-great Russian rocket industry will lose its ingenuity and ability to innovate.

Russia in Space: The Failed Frontier?, Brian Harvey.

Russia Won’t Transfer Space Technology

Dec 26 1:24 PM US/Eastern

By Vladimir Isachenkov, Associated Press Writer, Moscow

Russia will cooperate with China on space projects, but will not transfer sensitive technologies that could enable Beijing to become a rival in a future space race, the head of Russia’s space agency said Tuesday.

Anatoly Perminov, chief of Russia’s Federal Space Agency, said Moscow and Beijing would cooperate in robotic missions to the moon. He added, however, that Russia would maintain restrictions on sharing technology.

Russia sold China the technology that formed the basis of its manned space program, which launched its first astronaut in 2003 and two others in 2005. The Chinese Shenzhou spacecraft closely resembles the Russian Soyuz.

“The Chinese are still some 30 years behind us, but their space program has been developing very fast,” Perminov said at a news conference. “They are quickly catching up with us.”

The next Chinese manned space flight is due next year. China also wants to send up a space station and land a robot probe on the moon by 2010.

Perminov said that Russia would cooperate with China in space exploration strictly within the framework of a bilateral agreement that doesn’t envisage exporting Russian space technologies.

“We aren’t transferring any technologies to China now,” Perminov said. “This issue has been under special control of the government.”

He said some Russian scientists who violated the ban have been punished – an apparent reference to Valentin Danilov, a physicist who was convicted of spying for China in 2004. Danilov pleaded innocent in the case, saying the information on satellites he provided was not classified and that he had published some of it in scientific magazines.

“For China, whose economy has seen an immense growth, its space program has been one of the top national priorities,” he said. “They are spending much more on space compared to Russia…and their space industries employ many times more the number of scientists and workers than Russia’s.”

After decades of rivalry, Moscow and Beijing have developed what they call a strategic partnership since the 1991 Soviet collapse, pledging their adherence to a “multipolar world,” a term that refers to their opposition to the perceived U.S. domination. China also has become a top customer for Russia’s weapons industries, purchasing billions of dollars worth of jets, missiles, submarines and destroyers.

But despite the burgeoning bilateral ties, some Russian politicians and political experts have voiced concern that China’s growing could eventually threaten Russia and pointed at a growing flow of Chinese migrants to Russia’s sparsely-populated Far East.

Perminov said Russia led the world in the number of space launches this year, accounting for about 24 of the world’s total of 65 space launches so far – about 40 percent and ahead of the United States, which he said had a 28 percent share.

2 comments:

DarthVader said...

Happy new year to you Suzy!

Brian said...

Greetings, this is Brian from Digital Sprocket. I really like your blog. Instead of just exchanging links, how about writing up a blurb about yourself/your blog, and I'll post it on Digital Sprocket.

Contact me: sabletower at gmail dot com

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