NASA Head Seeks New Funding for Annual Moon Landings ‘Over a Dozen Years’

The U.S. space agency NASA aspires to land humans on the moon every year for 12 consecutive years, Administrator Bill Nelson testified to a congressional committee Wednesday in support of a request to boost the agency’s fiscal 2022 budget.

Nelson acknowledged to the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology that the agency’s budget for fiscal 2021 included $850 million toward the development of a lunar lander as part of an ambitious, roughly $3 billion Human Landing System program.

“But there needs to be a landing each year for a dozen years, so there are many more awards to come if you all decide that it’s in the interest of the United States to appropriate that money,” Nelson said.

The Biden administration has proposed a 6.6% increase to NASA’s current budget for 2022, amounting to a $24.8 billion request from Congress. The funding would support sending additional rovers to Mars, continuing International Space Station operations, initiating probes to Venus and sending manned flights to the moon by 2024.

Former astronaut

Nelson spent 18 years as a U.S. senator before President Joe Biden appointed him as NASA’s 14th administrator.

Members of the Science, Space and Technology Committee asked Nelson how NASA would use the new funding to preserve America’s title as the world’s preeminent space agency through programs focused on space exploration, space technology and STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics).

Many of the questions were explicitly tied to concern about China’s advancements in space technology and exploration.

“China clearly is in space for the long term, and we need to recognize that and respond accordingly,” committee Chairwoman Eddie Bernice Johnson said early in the hearing.

Nelson repeatedly emphasized that congressional approval of NASA’s proposed 2022 budget would better position the U.S. to compete with China by first returning humans to the moon and eventually landing them on Mars.

China’s rover

China led the world in orbital space launches in 2018 and 2019, but it was overtaken by the U.S. in 2020 through partnerships with private aerospace companies such as SpaceX. China also was the second country ever to successfully land a rover on Mars, which it did in May.

In response to China-oriented questions from Representative Michael Waltz, Nelson indicated he supported making the Wolf Amendment permanent. The 2011 law prohibits NASA from directly cooperating with the Chinese government and Chinese companies on any government-funded activities without the approval of Congress.

“That doesn’t mean that we can’t find areas of cooperation, and those areas are deconfliction of space assets running into each other [and] trying to get them to participate in getting rid of all of that space junk,” Nelson said.

Several members pressed Nelson for a concrete plan about how NASA would return to the moon, and he committed to releasing it soon after an August ruling is released by the Government Accountability Office regarding the agency’s Human Landing System.

The GAO is reviewing protests filed by aerospace company Blue Origin and information technology company Dynetics in response to a $2.9 billion contract assigned to SpaceX for assembly of the next lunar lander, which is part of NASA’s Artemis program. NASA has delayed the HLS contract with SpaceX until the GAO announces its decision.

Project Artemis is a plan to return humans, specifically the first woman and first person of color, to the moon, which was initiated by the Trump administration.

Nelson announced during the hearing that the first unmanned test flight for Project Artemis is set to launch in November, adding that the propulsion system to be used will be the “most powerful rocket ever.”

Crunching numbers

Lawmakers noted that the Biden administration had asked for only $1.2 billion in its 2022 budget request for the HLS — roughly a third smaller than the Trump administration’s 2021 proposal.

Nelson countered by pointing out that Congress only appropriated $850 million of the $3.3 billion NASA originally requested for fiscal 2021 to start developing a lunar lander.

“The Congress appropriated $850 million, and so, you can only get so many pounds of potatoes out of a five-pound sack,” Nelson said. “If you all are generous, whatever vehicle you use … then we’re going to try to rev it up.”

The 2022 budget request includes plans for five space launches under the Artemis program and the construction of a lunar satellite and a small space station that orbits the moon.

The budget also proposes a $300 million increase in Earth science programs, an area of NASA funding cut by the Trump administration.

The deadline to approve the budget, including allocations for NASA, is September 30.

Source: Voice of America

SADC COMMITTED TO MEDICINE RESEARCH

Maputo – Heads of the State and Government of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Wednesday pledged commitment to boost the organisation’s regional and national capacities in research and production of medicine, including vaccines manufacture.

The commitment is contained in the final statement released at the organisation´s meeting held in Maputo, Mozambique, on Wednesday.

Angola was represented at the event by the Minister of Interior Eugénio Laborinho, on behalf of President João Lourenço.

SADC Member States and the International Community have been urged to support the proposal of the temporary waiver of some dispositions of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Properties Rights (TRIPS).

The objective is to allow that more countries can produce the Covid-19 vaccines to efficiently respond to the pandemic.

The participants also welcomed the end of the nationalism of the vaccine and the equality of access to all countries.

They also appealed to the World Trade Organisation (WTO) to finalise the negotiations on the derogation of some dispositions of TRIPS and speed up its operation.

SADC citizens were also recommended to continue fulfilling and abiding by preventive measures against Covid-19 and to restrict the residents of the organisation to their respective countries based on the origin and the kind of vaccines they received to rethink their position.

The Statesmen exhorted as well the Member States to pass on the Regional Strategy for Food and Nutrition Security to deal with the raising malnutrition rate, reinforcing and enlarging the coverage of protection programmes and social security network.

The Summit supported the recommendations of Report of the chairperson of the SADC Cooperation Body in Political, Defense and Security Sectors, having approved the Mandate of the SADC Standby Force Mission to Mozambique to support for combat terrorism and acts of violent extremism in Cabo Delgado.

The Member States were also recommended to continue collaborating with the humanitarian agencies to continue providing humanitarian support for the people who are affected by terrorist attacks in Cabo Delgado including the internally displaced.

The participants congratulated Mozambique for hosting the SADC Humanitarian and Emergency Operations Center (SHOC) in Nacala, Mozambique, aimed to improve the preparation and the right regional response to emergency situations.

The officials reiterated their unconditional support for lifting of the sanctions imposed on Zimbabwe and support for the country in its ongoing socio-economic efforts.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

PUBLIC WORK CONTRACTS MAY CREATE 6,000 JOBS IN BENGUELA

Benguela – At least 6,000 jobs may be created in Benguela province, via public works projects to be carried out by the local government until December 2021, ANGOP learnt Wednesday.

The information was provided by Luís Nunes, first provincial secretary of MPLA in Benguela, during a meeting with leaders and activists of JMPLA, the ruling party’s youth organisation in Angola.

According to Luis Nunes, the projects include work on the streets of Sousa Coutinho, known as Maxi road, in Benguela, and Salvador Correia street, in Lobito, with a view to improving the circulation of people and goods on the coast.

For the municipalities in the interior, he announced the asphalting of eight kilometres of streets in Cubal and six kilometres of streets in Ganda and Balombo, respectively.

“We are also going to improve the communication routes between the municipal headquarters and the communes. We are talking about secondary and tertiary roads, as well as building other social facilities,” said the politician.

“Young people should take advantage of job opportunities in all sectors. Some only want jobs in offices, but it is necessary to reverse this trend, since the country needs technicians in various fields,” he said.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

NEW SIMPLIFICATION PROCESS FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PRESENTED

Luanda – Angola’s new simplification process for public administration dubbed “Simplifica 1.0” was presented Wednesday, in what the Executive said that the move aimed to modernise and improve the services of the Central and Local Government.

The project will allow for the reformulation of acts and procedures in Public, Central and Local Administration, said the secretary of the President of Republic for State Reform.

Speaking at the presentation ceremony of the project, Pedro Fiete said the goal is to focus on pursuing the public interest and in making life easier for citizens and businesses.

He stated that the main challenge is to respond adequately to the level of demand of citizens for a quality public service and remove the aspects that still make the Public Administration excessively bureaucratic, redundant and ineffective.

“As an example, we can point out the unification of the registration card and the title of automobile ownership, which becomes the Single Vehicle Identification Certificate, and we have extended the validity period of the diplomatic passport from three to five years, as well as eliminating the requirement of police declaration in case of loss”, he explained.

In turn, the Secretary of State for Local Authorities, Márcio Daniel, who expressed satisfaction at the implementation of the project, said that it is an opportunity for municipal and local administrations to be the main center for providing excellent public service.

The “Simplifica 1.0” project aims to simplify 32 administrative acts and procedures with a high impact on citizens’ lives, including the process of acquiring an Identity Card, Driving License, Passport and licenses.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

ANGOLAN PRESIDENT CALLS FOR CAR GOVERNMENT ARMS EMBARGO LIFTING

Luanda – The Angolan President, João Lourenço, Wednesday in New York (USA), defended an end to the arms embargo imposed on the government of the Central African Republic (CAR) by the United Nations Security Council.

The Angolan statesman, who was speaking at a meeting of the UN Security Council on the situation in CAR, called for justice in handling the issue of lifting the embargo.

He also called for international support to the government of that African country to equip its armed forces and create conditions to ensure internal stability after the withdrawal of UN peacekeeping forces.

João Lourenço also gave an update on what has been done, under Angola’s leadership, in the collective effort to seek peace and security in CAR.

Source: Angola Press News Agency

GOVERNOR REITERATES FIGHT AGAINST ILLEGAL EXPLOITATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES

Menongue – The governor of Cuando Cubango, Júlio Bessa, on Tuesday reiterated the close fight against illegal exploitation of wood, anarchic burning and poaching, as they are practices that violate the legislation in force in the country.

The governor, who was speaking on the sidelines of an event marking the 42nd anniversary of the creation of the Interior Ministry, said that the government had recently seen an intensification of mussivi wood cutting, but that from now on it would be tough and implacable in the fight against this and other illegal actions.

The combat will be carried out based on the law 6/17 of 24 January (Forest and Wildlife Basic Law), on the Presidential Decree 171/18, of 23 July (Forestry Regulation) and on the Presidential Decree 278/18, of 07 August (Decree that prohibits the cutting of mussivi wood).

Júlio Bessa warned the National Police and other competent bodies to continue to do their work with rigour, reminding that in case of seized wood, it will be used and incorporated in the execution process of the PIIM works.

He exhorted the civil society, the youth and the media to help the National Police and the Defence and Intelligence bodies to sensitise and mobilise the peasant families and respective communities and their leaders, to refrain from burning, since it is a propitious time of the year for this practice, which damages the soil and the environment.

Source: Angola Press News Agency