Just after midnight on Monday 27 June, above the vast wilderness of the Dhupuma Plateau in the Northern Territory, a sounding rocket designed to carry out experiments in space was launched by NASA. This was NASA’s first commercial launch outside of the US, and its first launch from Australia in more than 25 years.
It was also the Arnhem Space Centre’s first ever rocket launch, and the first commercial rocket ever to launch from Australia, hosted by Equatorial Launch Australia.
It has been hailed as an ‘incredible milestone’, but it isn't the only significant space activity taking place in Australia.
The creation of a domestic space agency, a surge in domestic and international investment, greater accessibility, the advent of autonomous systems, and the growing need for telecommunications, earth observation and satellite technology all signal that Australia’s space sector is finally coming into its own.
This expansion was the focus of the 2022 Innovation Lecture, delivered recently at The Warren Centre by the Australian Space Agency’s Director of Space Technology, Katherine Bennell Pegg.
According to Ms Bennell Pegg, an alumna of the University of Sydney’s Faculty of Engineering, space is the next frontier for Australian innovation.
“It’s an exciting time for space globally, but particularly for us here in Australia,” said Ms Bennell Pegg.
“We are in a unique phase where our space capabilities are expanding and we have the opportunity to shape that growth.
“Australia has so many world-leading niche capabilities that can be leveraged to further ourselves as a global space player and a regional powerhouse – including our desirable geographical location, stable political environment, wide open ranges and long coastlines, a rapidly maturing and growing space talent base, and a responsible regulatory framework.
“While innovation is central to space, space can also drive innovation across the nation more broadly – in mindset, in technical capability, in entrepreneurship. Space innovation is often innovation at its most extreme."
An ‘eye in the sky’ – space for humankind
Space also has the potential to provide earth-first technology that delivers myriad benefits to the environment, humanitarian issues and pure science, Bennell Pegg says.
Much of this rests on earth observation (EO) technology, underpinned by satellites and constellation systems. This technology gives us an ‘eye in the sky’, supporting a wide range of services from mapping and managing events such as bushfires and floods, through to the monitoring of biodiversity and deforestation and tracking the impact of climate change.
“Every time you check the weather you’re benefitting from over 30 earth observation satellite data feeds,” Ms Bennell Pegg said.
To fast track Australia’s EO sector, the Australian Government has invested $1.2 billion into the design, build and operation of four earth observation satellites.
Ultimately, investing in space helps us to better understand where we come from and where we’re going. Ms Bennell Pegg said: “Beyond the tangible, it epitomises humankind’s emotional and intangible desire to explore.”
This article was republished with permission from The University of Sydney.
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