What will happen after the International Space Station?
NOV 4, 202422 MIN
What will happen after the International Space Station?
NOV 4, 202422 MIN
Description
<p>The International Space Station will be decommissioned in 2030 and crash down into the Pacific Ocean, ending more than three decades of international cooperation. </p><p>Launched in the wake of the Cold War, the ISS is seen as a triumph of global diplomacy between the US, Russia and other nations. Its demise will mark the end of an era.</p><p>Nasa has awarded contracts to commercial companies to develop potential successors to the ISS, and maintain a U.S. presence in low earth orbit. Meanwhile Russia and India have said they plan to launch their own individual stations, and China has already got its own space station, Tiangong. </p><p>As the era of the International Space Station nears its end, this week on The Inquiry, we’re asking ‘What will happen after the International Space Station?’ </p><p>Presenter: Tanya Beckett
Producer: Matt Toulson
Researcher: Kirsteen Knight
Editor: Tara McDermott
Technical Operator: Ben Houghton</p><p>Contributors:
Jennifer Levasseur, Museum Curator at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Air and Space Museum, Washington D.C., US</p><p>Mark McCaughrean, former Senior Advisor for Science & Exploration at the European Space Agency and astronomer at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy, Heidelberg, Germany</p><p>Mai'a Cross, Professor of political science at Northeastern University, and director for the Center for International Affairs and World Cultures, Massachusetts, US</p><p>Wendy Whitman Cobb, Professor of strategy and security studies at the School of Advanced Air and Space Studies, Alabama, US</p><p>CREDIT: State of the Union address, 1984; Courtesy Ronald Reagan Presidential Library</p>