Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Canada signs on to U.S. space exploration pact

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Oct, 2020 10:08 PM
  • Canada signs on to U.S. space exploration pact

Canada has signed on to the Artemis Accords, a U.S.-led effort to establish global guidelines for sending explorers back to the Moon and beyond.

NASA says space agencies in Australia, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, Luxembourg and the United Arab Emirates also joined the pact.

The accords, which establish rules for extracting and using "space resources," commit signatories to exploring space peacefully and in the spirit of international co-operation.

They also call for transparency, the protection of heritage sites like the 1969 moon landing location and preventing the spread of orbital debris.

Canadian Space Agency president Lisa Campbell cheers the accords, but says more robust rules for the exploration of deep space are still a long ways off.

Campbell says the agency will begin consulting with Canadians, as well as a United Nations committee that oversees space exploration.

"The Artemis Accords are an important achievement for safe and sustainable space exploration," Campbell said in a statement.

"More work is needed to further solidify the framework for deep-space exploration activities, both nationally and internationally."

Canada has signed on to Artemis for the next 20 years, NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine told a virtual news conference Tuesday.

The country's role as a NASA partner has been evident for decades, Bridenstine said, most notably when the Maple Leaf-emblazoned Canadarm was a fixture of Space Shuttle missions throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

"Canada was the third nation on the planet to launch an object into space," he said. "Canada has a very robust history in space exploration."

It's also a country that's proud of its accomplishments in space, added Mike Gold, NASA's acting associate administrator for international and interagency relations.

"Canada is the only partner nation that has their space contribution on the $5 bill, so that absolutely makes Canada unique."

NASA's Artemis program, launched in 2017, aims to land the first woman and "the next man" on the moon in the southern pole region by 2024.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Check If You Are A P-Phubber And Is It Ruining Your Relationships

Check If You Are A P-Phubber And Is It Ruining Your Relationships
Do you constantly keep checking your phone while talking to your partner, even while out on a romantic date? If yes, you are guilty of p-phubbing.

Check If You Are A P-Phubber And Is It Ruining Your Relationships

Tooth Brushing App Helps Keep The Dentist Away

Tooth Brushing App Helps Keep The Dentist Away
An app that makes brushing teeth fun for youngsters improves dental hygiene of users, reports a new study.

Tooth Brushing App Helps Keep The Dentist Away

PayPal Launches Peer-to-peer Payments With Aim To Disrupting Traditional Banks

PayPal Launches Peer-to-peer Payments With Aim To Disrupting Traditional Banks
TORONTO — PayPal is introducing a new interpersonal payment service in Canada that it says will make IOUs a thing of the past.

PayPal Launches Peer-to-peer Payments With Aim To Disrupting Traditional Banks

Facebook Records One Billion Logins In A Day

"We just passed an important milestone. For the first time ever, one billion people used Facebook in a single day," CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote on his Facebook page

Facebook Records One Billion Logins In A Day

Facebook Working On Personal Assistant 'M'

Facebook Working On Personal Assistant 'M'
Social networking giant Facebook on Thursday said it had started to test a new service called 'M' which is a digital personal assistant inside the messenger app.

Facebook Working On Personal Assistant 'M'

Mastercard Starts Selfie Payments Trial

Mastercard Starts Selfie Payments Trial
In the US, 200 participants will test the 'selfie pay' system that will be used to verify their identity via their self-portraits, IBS Intelligence online reported.

Mastercard Starts Selfie Payments Trial