T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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349.1 | UK cuts space spending, Alan Bond resigns | DICKNS::KLAES | Angels in the Architecture. | Thu Oct 15 1987 12:20 | 51 |
| From: [email protected] (ERCF08 Bob Gray)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: HOTOL engine for sale.
Date: 13 Oct 87 17:20:28 GMT
Organization: I.T. School, Univ. of Edinburgh, U.K.
For those people charting the rapid nosedive of the UK's
credibility in space research, there were two more developments in the
last few days. The following is a report on ITV's ORACLE news service:
The Goverment has sparked off a major row by anouncing that no
extra money is to be spent on Europe's space agency. Trade minister
Kenneth Clarke told ITN the agency was a "hugely expensive club" and
the goverment was "not persuaded" it should increase cash.
The European Space Agency supporters want Britain to increase
spending from 113 million pounds to 300 million pounds a year. Tory
MP Sir Geoffrey Pattie said he felt Britain's partners would be upset
and shadow trade and industry minister Tony Blair warned of "short
termism".
In other words, the goverment's response to the charge that the
Britain spends too little on space research is that it is everyone
else who is spending too much. They also produced figures showing
that this country is the ONLY country making a profit out of space.
For a total Goverment expenditure of 116 million pounds the return was
300 million pounds in industrial turnover, and 600 million in
commercial and managerial support.
Yesterday (Monday) one of Britain's top space scientists anounced
that he would break the official seccrets act and his work abroad if
there was no more funding of research on it in this country.
Alan Bond is the holder of the patents on the design of the HOTOL
engine. Up till now he has been developing the engine with some
goverment funding, but these funds are due to end soon. Development
tests show that all the critical components do work. This engine will
work if flown.
Mr Bond said he would offer his work to the Europeans first and
then to the Americans. The Japanese would be next on his list. He is
fed up with his work being wasted. He wants to see his machine fly.
Mr Bond was one of the scientists who built Black arrow, Britain's
independant launch system. It was scrapped when it was proved to work.
Good luck to him. If I was on the jury at his trial for breaking
the official secrets act, I wouldn't convict him - but then I'm
prejudiced.
Bob.
|
349.2 | united spacions | RANGLY::BARNABY_GALE | | Fri Oct 16 1987 03:55 | 6 |
| Too bad the space project couldn't be take out of the hands of all
the governments in the world and become one organization. after
that we could slowly take one thing at a time away from them until
all they had to do is war. then the rest off the world would be
united and the governments wouldn't find anyone to fight for them.
and we would have our space program.
|
349.3 | Caught me in a bad mood... | BOEHM::DENSMORE | get to the verbs | Fri Oct 16 1987 08:25 | 11 |
| Re .1
Mr Bond would probably be better off putting Japan second on list
instead of the US. We went to the a moon a few times and figured
that was sufficient. We need the money for minesweepers anyway.
Now if he wanted to work on SDI...
Mike
PS. If he wanted to work in the most active space program, he'd
have to defect. :-(
|
349.4 | | MONSTR::HUGHES | Greetings and hallucinations! | Fri Oct 16 1987 10:38 | 9 |
| I tend to agree with .3. I think that he were to try to sell the
Hotol engine technology, the Japanese would be the most likely
candidates.
As for defecting, there is a long history of the Brits selling jet
engine technology to the Soviets (the British 'Nene' turbojet powered
the first long range Soviet jet bombers of the 1950s)...
gary
|
349.5 | Japanese using UK's HOTOL design? | DICKNS::KLAES | I grow weary of the chase! | Thu Oct 22 1987 11:03 | 35 |
| From: [email protected] (Alastair Mayer)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Re: HOTOL engine for sale.
Date: 19 Oct 87 20:14:45 GMT
Organization: Geovision Corporation, Ottawa, Canada
In article <[email protected]> [email protected] (ERCF08 Bob
Gray) writes:
[..depressing stuff about the state of British support for
space deleted ..]
>Alan Bond is the holder of the patents on the design of the
>HOTOL engine. Up till now he has been developing the engine
> [...]
>Mr Bond said he would offer his work to the Europeans first
>and then to the Americans. The Japanese would be next on his
>list. He is fed up with his work being wasted. He wants to
>see his machine fly.
I heard recently (at Worldcon in Brighton, I think) from someone
connected with British Aerospace that the Japanese are currently
working on *five* different approaches to air-breathing rocket engines
(or whatever you want to call HOTOL and the scramjets). At least one,
probably two approaches they are taking are "disturbingly close to
what we're doing with HOTOL".
Sigh. I wish Mr Bond well. No point trying to offer the engine
here, though. Canada threw away its aerospace industry when the Arrow
was scrapped.
Alastair JW Mayer BIX: al
UUCP: ...!utzoo!dciem!nrcaer!cognos!geovision!alastair
"What we really need is a good 5-cent/gram launch vehicle."
|
349.6 | How will this affect Europe's space shuttle? | DICKNS::KLAES | This place has got everything! | Tue Nov 24 1987 09:05 | 11 |
| VNS MAIN NEWS: [Richard De Morgan, Chief Editor, VNS]
============== [Basingstoke, England ]
Education, Employment, Industrial and Commercial News
-----------------------------------------------------
BAe and GEC Avionics loose HERMES contracts with ESA after British
decision not to participate in space research.
<><><><><><><> VNS Edition : 1451 Tuesday 24-Nov-1987 <><><><><><><>
|
349.7 | The effect will be negligible | JANUS::BARKER | | Wed Nov 25 1987 08:56 | 18 |
| Re: .6
> BAe and GEC Avionics loose HERMES contracts with ESA after British
> decision not to participate in space research.
Unfortunately this is not the whole story. The ESA contracts for work on
HERMES are different from previous ESA contracts. They have a clause that
if the contract is terminated or is not continued all technical data,
designs and the like produced during the contract period must be handed
over to the new contractor. Predictably, some of the companies are
screaming - the report I read said that a company working on a simulator
was worst affected.
The effect on the HERMES program will be negligible. There are plenty of
French and German companies ready to take over the work that was being done
in Britain.
jb
|
349.8 | No GB in ESA space shuttle | DICKNS::KLAES | The President of what? | Thu Feb 11 1988 16:15 | 7 |
| According to today's Vogon News, Great Britain has dropped out
of the plans for building a European manned space shuttle.
What effects will this have on the European shuttle project?
Larry
|
349.9 | PSC March meeting on British space developments | 26523::KLAES | The Universe, or nothing! | Wed Jun 20 1990 12:06 | 162 |
| From: [email protected] (M.S.Bennett Supvs= Prof Pendry)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: British national space activity
Date: 19 Jun 90 13:24:24 GMT
Reply-To: [email protected] (M.Sean Bennett)
Organization: SEDS (UK)
Note - Due to problems with character sets, read 'pound' for $.
National Ciriculum
==================
The keynote address to the March meeting of the
Parlimentary Space Committee was given by Robert Jackson MP
Parlimentary Under Secretary of State, Department of Education and
Science.
He includes amongst his responsibilities a DES contribution of
some $45 million to the space programme, the great majority of
which is deployed on European Space Agency projects. This amounts
to more than 25 per cent of Government civil space spending.
Parliamentarians and industrialists pressed the point that
insufficient attention was being paid to the education benefits of
space as a source of inspiration, as a broadly based scientific
and technological training which provided an entry point into a wide
variety of career patterns, and as an area of science which offered
the widest ranging theoretical and practical problems. Members
observed that whereas applications for aerospace related courses
at Universities continue to increase - typically 15 applicants for
each place - engineering as a whole found it difficult to attract
students.
While emphasising the autonomy of higher education institutions
and of the Research Councils, the Minister was sympathetic to
this view and to a suggestion that an increase in University
training in Space Technology at both Undergraduate and Postgraduate
level could be a valuable investment for the country. He would also
discuss with the Secretary of State the possibilities of including
space related matters in the national curriculum for schools.
The Minister empasised that his department continues to exercise
the most rigorous judgements on space spending. Priority would
continue to be given the the ESA's science programme to which the UK
contributed 25 milion per annum. UK pressure had led to the recent
major review of the scope and costs of ESA's Horizon 2000 science
programme and he was encouraged by the suport now being given by
other countries for the improvment measures. Other DES intrests
include Earth observation, which involves a contribution of some 7
million next year. In this area the UK attaches a particulary high
priority to the Polar Platform project. However, he was sceptical
about the commercial rewards of ESA's microgravity programmes.
The Commitee also took intrest in a British company's
success in an international competition for a race to Mars in 1992
to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Columbus' voyage to America.
The race will be between solar powered spacecraft representing
Europe, US and Asia and employing vast sails (280 meters diameter
when unfolded but made of material only thosands of an inch thick)
which will be propelled by the pressure exerted by sunlight - light
particles or photons.
The Cambridge Consultant' design has been selected as the best
technical solution from world-wide contenders. The race and the
technological challenge is likely to hold all the inspirational
appeal of space which the Parlimentary Space Committe was
recommending to the Minister
ESA meets PSC.
==============
On 3-4 May, in Paris, the Parlimentary Space Committee (PSC)
met with officials of the European Commission and the European
Space Agency (ESA) for discussions on space policis and plans in the
light of 1992 and the changing European political scene. The
Committe, chaired by Michael Marshall MP, with member of both Houses
and leading space industrialists, met with Mr. Joan Majo of the
Commission's telecommunications Director General (DG13), and with
Prof. R. Luest, Director General of ESA, and all of his Programme
Directors.
PSC members came prepared to hear views coloured by the
differences in the policies of the two Administrations, since the
Commission had appeared to challenge ESA's previous sovereignty in
civil space R&D. Instead, the PSC came away convinced of the enormous
potential in close co-operation between the two Administrations, for
the development, exploitation and commercialisation of both space
communications and Earth observation. the PSC also gained a
first-hand account of the practical impact of the UK's declining
share in ESA programmes.
In his prsentation to the PSC, Mr. Majo advocated the cause for
change and for a new framework for Eurpean space. The Commission's
proposals for achieving this were set out in the document "The
Community and Space: A Coherent Apprach", which was issued in
1987. ESA had proved to be a highly successful Agency for civil
space co-operation in the past, but the need had emerged for a shift
from scientific and research goals to more commercial objectives
geared to meeting market and user demands and improving European
competitiveness in the space field. The Community was best placed to
meet this need.
Community resposibilities also included the overall co-ordination
of space R&D, and the focus of space intrest in the developing
dialogue with Eastern Eurpoe. The Commission was also axious to
improve co-operation between the civil and military space sectors,
not only for strategic advantage but also to bolster the Comunity's
industrial strength and competitivness.
In their presentations to PSC, Prof. Luest and his team stressed
the fact that Europe's great acievements in space communications,
Earth observation and science stemmed first and foremost from the
co-operation built up around ESA.
On the UK's contribution to ESA, it was emphasised that Britain
had bee a major and successful partner in the past, and the
decline in our share of activities from 14% to 6% over the past
6 years was a matter of profound regret. The UK had been on the
point of dominating the Eurpopean space telecomunications market
through its major share of ESA's ECS, MARECS and OLYMPUS
satellites, only to put its position at risk by pulling out of
new Agency programs too far and too quickly. Prof. Luest cited the
UK's meager share of 1% and 6% of the 2 new ESA telecomunications
satellite programmes, and questioned the UK Government's assumptions
about the maturity of the space communications market.
By contrast, the UK's support for ESA's science and Earth
observation programmes was applauded as a major factor towards their
spectacular success.
Although ESA's convention specifically ruled out collaboration
in any military applications, Prof. Luest was convinced that
member nations would support a major role for the Agency in
any European programme for the verification of conventional
disarmament from space, both in terms of technologies and the
use of ESA Earth observation satellites.
Prof. Luest was convinced of ESA's ability to meet all future
challenges without any fundamental change in its charter or
organisation. He welcomed the extending dialogue with the Commission.
Whereas it was often claimed that ESA's industrial policy of ##juste
retour## was a major source of potential conflict with the Single Act
and future relations with the Commission, he himself could foresee no
such problem. The awarding of industrial contracts by the Agency on
the basis of national contributions has been effective in promoting
European competitivness, and since ESA's business is R&D and upstream
of the market, it does not conflict with Single Act rules.
For further Information please contact:
Michael Marshall MP
House of Commons
Whitehall
LONDON
Tel: 071 219 4698
Or send stuff to me to pass on to him (cheaper if in the USA!) at:
[email protected]
|
349.10 | Did you just want to put it in verbatim? | 2853::BUEHLER | Seat of the pants programming | Wed Jun 20 1990 17:52 | 3 |
| For what it's worth, the pound symbol (�) is the compose sequence "L-"
John
|
349.11 | Dounreay Space Port | MTWAIN::KLAES | Keep Looking Up | Thu Jun 09 1994 18:11 | 76 |
| Article: 2586
Newsgroups: sci.space.policy
From: [email protected] (Peter Card)
Subject: Dounreay Space Port
Organization: Joint European Torus
Date: Thu, 9 Jun 1994 09:55:19 GMT
Taken from AEA times - the UK Atomic Energy Authority newssheet.
Plans to site a rocket launch facility for small satellites at
Dounreay was(sic) given a further boost this month.
A report by space consultants ESYS Limited, chosen by the Caithness
and Sutherland Enterprise to conduct an initial market assessment of
the project, found that the potential exists for carrying out a
demonstration satellite launch in Northern Scotland.
"Although it is still early days, we are very excited about the
concept," explained David Harris, business director for defence and
manufacturing. "There is a real remand in Europe for such a facility,
which it is hoped would launch small, lightweight(less than half a
tonne) polar orbiting satellites"
These satellites would be used to monitor such enviromental concerns
as deforestation and ozone depletion, support telecommunications and
carry out space science investigations.
In the view of Roger James, manager responsible for the exploitation
of the Dounreay estate, the site is well suited to geographically ,
"offering a launch corridor over the sea in a direct line to the North
Pole".
He added, "We have much of the high-tech support infrastructure
services neededand such a venture could create more jobs. The response
from the local community is generally one of positive interest in what
would be an entirely new area of activity for Caithness."
According to ESYS the possibility of such a venture should be
investigated further. The studies proposed include a more detailed
assessment of the latent Eutopean market for a lauch facility.
:
me again...
By way of background, Dounreay, in Caithness , Scotland, is as far
north as it is possible to go in mainland Britain, without going 10
miles up the road to John O Groats, after which you get your feet wet.
It is the site of the UKAEA's Prototype Fast Reactor, which was shut
down last month. This appears to be one of the schemes being
investigated for utilisation of the site in the post fast reactor age.
You have to admire the originality of the conception.
Across the Pentland Firth are the Orkney islands. I presume that the study
allowed for Orkney in their launch corridor assessments. Probably ...
Sea communications are good, and historically, heavy , perfectly safe,
well shielded, nuclear consigments have been regularly delivered to
the Dounreay site via the port of Scrabster. Rocket stages and
payloads could presumably be brought in by sea in the same way. As the
report hints, the soon-to-be-unemployed Dounreay workers constitute a
useful pool of highly trained staff, albeit in a slightly diffrent
line of work.
At the moment this appears to be at the PR puff stage. I have trouble
overcoming my natural cynicism, but it is intriguing.
--
__._____.___._____.__._______________________________________________________
__|_. ._| ._|_._._|__| Peter Card, Joint European Torus, Abingdon OX14 3EA
| | | |_. | | | [email protected] or CIS 100010,366
| | | _| | | | "This space reserved for spontaneous witticism"
._| | | |_. | | | "This space intentionally left blank"
--`--~'-+---+-+-+----+-------------------------------------------------------
- Disclaimer: Please note that the above is a personal view and should not
be construed as an official comment from the JET project.
|