Lunar Economy

US revises plans towards the Moon, fallout for Italian aerospace

Nasa shelves the Gateway project, the I-Hab module was assigned to Thales Alenia Space and the Turin factory

by Filomena Greco

3' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

3' min read

Translated by AI
Versione italiana

On the surface, it sounds like an announcement 'for experts in the field'. In reality, it is a potential revision of the lunar exploration programmes - announced by NASA - with strong industrial repercussions in Europe and in Turin in particular. Last Tuesday, the American agency announced that it had cancelled plans to set up a space station in lunar orbit, as envisaged by the Artemis programme.

It is one of the most complex and articulated programmes, in the field of space exploration, ever undertaken by Europe and the United States, so much so as to open up a new phase in the space economy, the Lunar Economy. It is a programme in which Italian expertise in the field of orbiting habitat modules is at the forefront, with the Thales Alenia Space plant (a joint venture between Leonardo, 33%, and Thales, 67%) in Turin.

Loading...

An open scenario, therefore, and a risky one for the Made in Italy aerospace industry. After the setback of the exploration programme directed at the Red Planet, Exomars, first because of the defection of the Americans and then because of the 'cumbersome' presence of the Russians, now it is once again the American front that is changing the cards on the table and putting the project for the Gateway space station in lunar orbit, part of the Artemis programme, on the bench.

Holding the line on relations with the Americans directly is the European Space Agency with ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher, who attended the Ignition event organised by NASA on 24 March in Washington. "ESA is in close consultation with its member states, international partners and European industry to assess the implications of the announcement," says the European Space Agency.

The European contribution with respect to the Gateway, in particular, provides for the supply of fundamental modules such as the I-Hab, intended to house the astronauts, and Esprit, designed to ensure communications, refuelling and logistical support for the station. The potential damage for Italian industry, and in particular for Thales Alenia Space, would be twofold: on the one hand, the design and production work on the I-Hab module would be lost, and on the other, the contract for the design of the airlock in the hands of the United Arab Emirates (Mohammad Bin Rashid Space Centre as prime contractor), also assigned to Thales Alenia Space, would also fall.

The Americans seem intent on concentrating more on the construction of the lunar base - by 2036, with an investment of more than 30 billion dollars - and thus ensuring a lasting human presence on Earth's satellite. In the first phase, the pace of activities towards the Moon would be increased by sending rovers, instruments and technological demonstrators: NASA envisages up to 30 robotic landings starting in 2027 to speed up deliveries. The second phase would focus, according to the Trumpian vision of space exploration, on the creation of the first semi-inhabitable infrastructure and regular logistics. In the third phase, NASA would provide the heavier infrastructure needed for a continuous human presence on the Moon. This would include, for the time being, the Multipurpose Habitats of the Italian Space Agency.

The geopolitics of Space would therefore seem to point to a more autarkic choice on the part of the United States, making a change in European strategies even more urgent, for example on the development of autonomous space launch technologies. Italia, and Europe, therefore, would remain in the running for the development of the habitable module destined for the Moon.

Ensuring technological 'sovereignty' for Europe for the time being is the Argonaut programme. Thales Alenia Space, in fact, has won a major contract with the European Space Agency for the production of a lunar lander. Argonaut will fly to the Moon and land on its surface, providing Europe with autonomous access to the satellite.

Copyright reserved ©
Loading...

Brand connect

Loading...

Newsletter

Notizie e approfondimenti sugli avvenimenti politici, economici e finanziari.

Iscriviti