In a landmark development, after initial hesitation, India has signed the Artemis Accords developed by the US, which lay down the rules and guidelines for international partners in space exploration. The Indo-US joint statement of 23rd Jun 2023 recalled the “growing cooperation between the two countries on earth and space science” and welcomed the “enhanced commercial collaboration between the US and Indian private sectors in the entire value chain of the space economy”. It promised to facilitate technology transfer and address export control issues. President Biden appreciated India’s signing of the Artemis Accords for “common vision of space exploration for the benefit of all humankind”.
In October 2020, the US, UK, UAE, Luxemburg, Japan, Italy, Canada and Australia signed the “Artemis Accords” which lay down the “principles for cooperation in the civil exploration and use of the moon, mars, comets and asteroids for peaceful purposes”. The aim of the Accords is to usher in a new era of space exploration and build upon the “legacy of the Apollo programme” and undertake “sustainable human exploration of the solar system”. The Accords underscored the global benefits of space exploration and commerce. So far twenty seven countries have signed the Artemis Accords. India is the latest to do so.
In the cold war years, the US pursued the Apollo mission programme which resulted in the first ever human landing on the moon. This established US supremacy in outer space. The American space programme also developed dual use technology and numerous military applications. As the world enters into a new phase of great power rivalries in the 21st century, the US is once again trying to maintain and further its dominance in outer space. Its Artemis programme is designed to land the first woman and next man on the surface of the moon, exploit its resources, set up human settlements there and explore Mars, asteroids and comets as well as the deep space.
A considerable body of international space law has been developed over the last five decades. In order to be acceptable internationally, the Artemis Accords specifically mention the Outer Space Treaty (1967), Rescue and Return Agreement (1968), Liability Convention (1972), and the Registration Convention (1975). The Accords emphasize peaceful nature of space cooperation (section-3), transparency (section-4), interoperability (section- 5), emergency assistance (section-6), registration of space objects (section-7), release of scientific data (section-8), preserving outer space heritage (section-9), utilisation of space resources (section -10), deconfliction of space activities (section-11), managing orbital debris (section-12) and final provisions (section-13). There are several new elements in Artemis Accords which do not find explicit mention in the earlier treaties, conventions and agreements. For instance the new activities will create new entities like ‘safety zones’ on the surface of moon. The ‘safety zone’ concept, an entirely new concept, itself is expected to change and evolve overtime. Maintaining and managing ‘safety zones’ will require new rules and definitions.
The Artemis Accords mention that “the extraction, utilisation of space resources, including any recovered from the surface or subsurface of the moon, mars, comets or asteroids should be executed in a manner that complies with the Outer Space Treaty” and that “the extraction of space resources does not inherently constitute national appropriation under Article II of the Outer Space Treaty”.
Artemis Accords do not tantamount to an international agreement. These have not been negotiated by the parties. They have been laid out by the US unilaterally in ‘take-it-or-leave-it mode’. Do they conflict with existing international conventions and space law?
The Outer Space Treaty (OST) is the mother document of space law. It envisages ‘free access’ to celestial objects for all countries and treats outer space as ‘heritage’ of mankind. However, in the new era of space exploration, the private sector is set to play an increasingly important role. The concept of private ownership of celestial resources, for instance, mining of the surface of moon for commercial purposes is envisaged.
Slowly and steadily space exploration is moving into new, uncharted territory. New space activities will create new facts on the ground and put more pressure on the existing space laws which are already stressed.
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[2] https://www.vifindia.org/author/arvind-gupta
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