Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology (): Since the new Department for
Science, Innovation and Technology was created, we have been
clear on its mission to make the UK a science and technology
superpower and grow the economy.
Today we are taking further decisive steps towards that
objective, by publishing the government’s National Space Strategy
in Action.
Since the publication of the National Space Strategy in September
2021, jointly with MOD, we have made significant progress to
deliver our ambition to build one of the most innovative and
attractive space economies in the world. We have announced more
than £10 billion of funding for space activities stretching
across a decade, including more than £1.75 billion to our key
delivery agency the UK Space Agency (UKSA) in this Spending
Review period.
We have appointed a new CEO, Paul Bate, and chair, , to UKSA; ; matured UK Space
Command and published the first Defence Space Strategy; convened
the National Space Council to provide ministerial coordination
and leadership; and the creation of DSIT has brought together
space policy and spectrum and space communications regulatory
policy into one department. We are demonstrating that regulatory
leadership in creating an industry led Space Sustainability
Standard; a framework of standards for measuring and managing
debris, improving satellite repair and retrieval and benchmarking
genuinely sustainable supply chains with strong support from the
space sector in the UK and internationally.
We have delivered on the licensing and first launch from the UK’s
first spaceport; we remain committed to becoming the leading
provider of commercial small satellite launches in Europe by
2030, with a horizontal spaceport now established in Newquay, and
more launches planned from Scotland at Saxavord and Sutherland
Spaceports. And we have made a major investment of £1.84 billion
into the European Space Agency in November 2022, securing 3 new
British astronauts alongside major commercial opportunities for
UK SMEs in hugely important international collaborations.
The global space race for commercial investment is only speeding
up. Our nearest competitor nations are significantly increasing
their investment in space activities. And despite the long-term
nature of space exploration, the speed at which the new
commercial space economy is evolving requires much more agile and
innovative responses from government if we are to avoid falling
behind. From small satellite design, manufacturing and launch to
space traffic management, satellite communications, Earth
observation and the lunar economy.
This publication sets out just the first part of our response to
that challenge and the concrete steps needed to deliver on the
National Space Strategy ambition in the short term.
It defines the next steps we will take in delivering the National
Space Strategy, moving from the ‘ignition’ phase into the
‘thrust’ phase. It sets out some concrete policy steps we are
taking now and sets the direction for the work of government over
the next 18 months – giving space sector businesses and
innovators a clarity and confidence of where government is
intervening, and where we will intervene in the future. And it
sets out the key metrics we will use to track our progress.
I will be placing copies of this publication in the libraries of
both Houses, and it will also be made available on gov.uk.