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Post Info TOPIC: China & ESA Agreement


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RE: China & ESA Agreement
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Following the success of the Dragon Programme, more than 300 leading European and Chinese scientists have gathered from 21 to 25 April 2008 in Beijing in the Peoples Republic of China to present their results and to kick off the programmes second phase, Dragon 2.
The Dragon Programme is a joint undertaking between ESA and the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of China designed to encourage increased exploitation of ESA and Chinese Earth Observation (EO) satellite data within China.

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On Friday 18 November, Sun Laiyan, Administrator of the China National Space Administration, and ESA Director General, Jean-Jacques Dordain, signed an Intergovernmental Framework Agreement for space cooperation for peaceful purposes.

The signing ceremony took place in the Diao Yu Tai Guest House, Beijing, in the presence of the Chinese State Councillor, Mrs Chen Lizhi, and representatives of the diplomatic community. This is the first Framework Agreement that China has signed with ESA and it will facilitate cooperation between ESA and China in a number of areas including space science, Earth observation, telecommunications, navigation and microgravity research.

China and ESA are already cooperating on a number of space projects, one of which is the Double Star Programme with CNSA and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, providing complementary data to the Cluster programme. Another important project is the Dragon Programme set up by ESA and the National Remote Sensing Centre of China.

This focuses on using data from ESA’s ERS and Envisat missions for science and applications development. The Dragon Programme proved its usefulness earlier this year during China’s rainy season, when imagery of flooding acquired by Envisat’s Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar sensor allowed the Chinese authorities to swiftly assess affected areas and plan their responses.

Now that the Framework Agreement has come into force, ESA looks forward to further cooperation with China and closer collaboration in ESA’s space programmes.

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