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Weekly Roundup for SpacePolicyOnline.com: February 12-18, 2024

Weekly Roundup for SpacePolicyOnline.com: February 12-18, 2024

Here are links to all the articles published on SpacePolicyOnline.com over the last week, February 12-18, 2024, including our “What’s Happening in Space Policy” for this coming week. Click on each title to read the entire article.

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What’s Happening in Space Policy February 18-24, 2024

What’s Happening in Space Policy February 18-24, 2024

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of February 18-24, 2024 and any insight we can offer about them.  The House and Senate are in recess except for pro forma sessions.

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Japan Scores Success On Second H3 Launch

Japan Scores Success On Second H3 Launch

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries succeeded in launching the new H3 rocket today almost a year after the first attempt failed. H3 will replace Japan’s existing H-IIA, providing more lift capability at lower cost.

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White House: Russia Developing “Troubling” ASAT Capability, But Not Immediate Threat

White House: Russia Developing “Troubling” ASAT Capability, But Not Immediate Threat

National Security Council spokesman John Kirby confirmed today that Russia is developing a “troubling” antisatellite, or ASAT, capability, but stressed it is not an immediate threat. Kirby was reacting to speculation in the press following statements by Rep. Mike Turner (R-OH) yesterday that Turner said revealed a serious national security threat. Citing anonymous sources, several media outlets asserted the matter involves Russia’s development of a nuclear ASAT.  Kirby declined to provide many details, but tamped down concerns that any threat is imminent.

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Another U.S. Lunar Lander Lifts Off

Another U.S. Lunar Lander Lifts Off

A U.S. spacecraft is once again on its way to the Moon. If successful, it will be the first U.S. lunar lander since the Apollo era.  Pittsburgh-based Astrobotic tried last month, but its Peregrine lander suffered a propulsion failure. Now Houston-based Intuitive Machines is hoping to enter the history books not only with the first U.S. landing since 1972, but the closest to the Moon’s South Pole.

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Transitioning From ISS to Commercial Space Stations: Plenty of Questions, But Few Answers

Transitioning From ISS to Commercial Space Stations: Plenty of Questions, But Few Answers

A congressional hearing today illuminated a wide range of policy issues awaiting resolution as the International Space Station nears its end, but the answers remain elusive. The ISS is expected to be decommissioned in 2030 and NASA is counting on the private sector to build new space stations in low Earth orbit, or LEO, where NASA can be just one of many customers. But timing is a challenge and the overriding concern is to avoid a gap between ISS and whatever comes next lest the only space station in LEO belongs to China.

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Weekly Roundup for SpacePolicyOnline.com: January 29-February 11, 2024

Weekly Roundup for SpacePolicyOnline.com: January 29-February 11, 2024

Here are links to all the articles published on SpacePolicyOnline.com over the past two weeks, January 29-February 11, 2024, including our “What’s Happening in Space Policy” for this coming week. Click on each title to read the entire article.

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What’s Happening in Space Policy February 11-17, 2024

What’s Happening in Space Policy February 11-17, 2024

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of February 11-17, 2024 and any insight we can offer about them. The House is in session this week. The Senate’s schedule is uncertain.

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Greece Becomes 12th ESA Member to Join the Artemis Accords

Greece Becomes 12th ESA Member to Join the Artemis Accords

Greece just became the 35th country, and the 12th member of the European Space Agency, to sign the U.S.-led Artemis Accords. The Accords are a set of non-binding principles for responsible behavior on the Moon. ESA is one of NASA’s partners in the Artemis program to return astronauts to the Moon for long-term sustainable exploration and utilization.

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Axiom-3 Home at Last

Axiom-3 Home at Last

The four-person Axiom-3 private astronaut crew is home at last, days late because of poor weather in Florida. Their ride to and from the International Space Station was aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule that splashes down either in the Atlantic Ocean or Gulf of Mexico off the Florida coast. Rough seas meant they spent almost a week longer in space than expected. The mission included Türkiye’s first astronaut, ESA’s first “project astronaut,” and the first Italian astronaut to make a suborbital spaceflight before visiting the ISS.

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