Canada, the third nation to get to space, can and must claim rightful ownership to extraterrestrial technology – and achievements.
Iain Christie, president of
Kanata-based space technology firm Neptec Design Group Ltd., told delegates at
the Canadian Aerospace Summit that “being a space-faring nation is a birthright
of Canadians” – as befits the third country, after the Soviet Union and the
U.S., to launch a satellite into orbit in the 1960s.
The aviation and space industry is
still digesting – and praising – the comprehensive aerospace review for the
Canadian government released last week by David Emerson, a former cabinet
minister.
The report urges Ottawa to place
space and aerospace at the top of the government’s national priorities –
including personal involvement by the prime minister at the key priorities and
planning committee meetings.
Emerson said the space sector had
been “drifting” in the federal government’s priorities for several years, and
that it regularly fell “into a black hole” in terms of the direction and
importance it was accorded.
Industry Minister Christian Paradis
said that before commenting and acting on the report’s 25 main recommendations,
cabinet colleagues must discuss them at length. He did not say when a decision
could be made.
But industry executives, including
Steve MacLean, a former astronaut and the president of St-Hubert’s Canadian
Space Agency, almost universally hailed Emerson’s report at the summit,
organized by the Aerospace Industries Association of Canada.
MacLean and Christie, whose firm
makes spaceflight sensors, among other things, emphasized the disproportionate
importance Canada and Canadians hold in space exploration.
Christie recalled a space-shuttle
mission on which he worked as a junior engineer in Houston in 1995 – STS-74 in
NASA parlance.
Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield,
who will launch into space again on Dec. 19, “had to take the Canadarm to pull
a Russian module out of the space-shuttle bay, attach it to the shuttle, which
then flew up and attached it to the Russian Mir space station,” Christie said.
“It was symbolically and physically
a Canadian who, a few short years after the Cold War, took the Russians in one
hand, the Americans in the other, and brought them together.
“That is emblematic of the role
Canada has always played,” he said.
MacLean also recalled how awed he
was during a stint at NASA to discover that John Hodge was a Canadian.
When Neil Armstrong’s Gemini capsule
– pre-Apollo – suddenly gyrated out of control, Hodge calmly talked him though
to recovery “literally seconds away” from spacecraft disintegration.
MacLean said he was “incredibly
pleased” by Emerson’s report.
“And when I heard Minister Paradis
say that space is important to the country, this stabilizes us,” he said.
“Just that one observation
stabilizes things – it tells Canadians what the space program can do for
Canada.”
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