NSW Minister backs public campaign to send Australian of the Year on space flight

Industry
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Group Captain Katherine Bennell-Pegg. Photo: Defence.

NSW Minister for Innovation, Science and Technology, Anoulack Chanthivong has thrown his support behind a recent public campaign to send Australian of the Year, RAAF group captain and astronaut Katherine Bennell-Pegg on a space mission.

NSW Minister for Innovation, Science and Technology, Anoulack Chanthivong has thrown his support behind a recent public campaign to send Australian of the Year, RAAF group captain and astronaut Katherine Bennell-Pegg on a space mission.

A public and industry-led campaign was launched late last month to implore the Australian government to partner with the European Space Agency in sending ESA-trained astronaut Bennell-Pegg on an ESA mission.

It’s understood that Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has already received a formal offer, with a deadline of four weeks, from the head of ESA with a cooperative agreement for a flight to space.

 
 

Minister Chanthivong, speaking at a space industry event on March 4, confirmed his support for the initiative to promote space industry and aerospace education for youth.

“Well, can I just say, Katherine Bennell-Pegg, what an accomplishment, not only for her, but I think for all Australians to be recognised in Australian of the Year is a great honour,” he said.

“And I think she’s a great role model, inspiration for all Australians, younger Australians to get into the space industry, but in particular, I think for young girls as well, that is, there is a future for them if they choose to be in this (aerospace) division.

“In terms of a public campaign. I think it’s a wonderful thing to do. Having our first female astronaut into space would be a wonderful achievement, not only for Katherine, but I think for the nation as well. So, we should continue to support her and support the campaign.”

The public campaign has claimed that there is a ‘generational strategic and economic opportunity for Australia’ to support Bennell-Pegg on an ESA mission.

“An ESA–Australian space mission aligns squarely with the government’s priorities in sovereign capability, productivity, advanced manufacturing, and strengthening international partnerships,” according to a campaign statement.

“Similar arrangements are used by Canada and Japan to secure major missions without capital outflow.

“The risk to Australia is not in acting; it is in not acting. Rejecting an ESA offer would forfeit a once-in-a-generation chance to strengthen a major alliance, catalyse a STEM recovery, and build sovereign capability with high national returns; supporting rather than competing with urgent priorities such as cost of living.

“As ESA flight opportunities narrow with the ISS approaching its planned deorbit in 2030, European astronauts remain mission-ready through active programs, while Australia risks allowing its only astronaut to lose operational currency in the absence of a formal relationship.

“This is a chance to forge a unifying narrative of ambition, innovation and partnership.”

Robert Dougherty

Robert is a senior journalist who has previously worked for Seven West Media in Western Australia, as well as Fairfax Media and Australian Community Media in New South Wales. He has produced national headlines, photography and videography of emergency services, business, community, defence and government news across Australia. Robert graduated with a Bachelor of Arts, Majoring in Public Relations and Journalism at Curtin University, attended student exchange program with Fudan University and holds Tier 1 General Advice certification for Kaplan Professional. Reach out via email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or via LinkedIn.
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