The European Space Agency (ESA) has this week outlined
its Space Safety Programme (S2P) plans on how to boost
awareness of threats from space to vital infrastructure, both on
Earth and in orbit, and how to protect them: plus its planned use
of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to significantly improve the
sustainability, security and resilience of ESA space missions and
operations.
Primary space-based threats include space weather, naturally
occurring space-born objects like meteoroids, and artificial
space debris. ESA Member States have encouraged ESA to implement
a “Zero Debris” approach for its missions and to enable other
actors to pursue similar paths, putting Europe at the forefront
of sustainability on Earth and in space while preserving the
competitiveness of its industry.
“ESA is implementing a “Zero Debris” approach, with the objective
that ESA missions entering design phase after 2030 will not leave
behind any significant debris objects in orbit,” explained Holger
Krag, Head of the ESA Space Safety
Programme.
ESA is also investing in key initiatives to increase the cyber
resilience of operations, including a Space Cybersecurity
Operations Centre: and targeting a security-certified
multi-mission operations ground segment.
“ESA has embraced Artificial Intelligence as a strategic
technology,” said Mariella Spada, Head of Ground Systems
Engineering and Innovation at the European Space Agency. “It
unlocks efficiency gains through AI-enabled automation and is
also of key importance to future cybersecurity developments by
enabling intelligent detection of threats to space systems.”
Sustainable and resilient mission operations
Speaking ahead of this year’s Software Defined Space
Conference in Tallinn, Estonia, where he is a keynote
speaker, Dr Daniel Fischer, Head of Ground System Segment and
Cybersecurity Engineering at ESA, went into more
detail.
“As we move further into the third decade of this century, the
space economy is growing, and space-based services have permeated
every aspect of our daily lives. They have become critical
infrastructure upon which our society depends. The number of
smaller, more agile, spacecraft in use around the Earth is
growing significantly, and these craft are becoming more and more
integrated into our terrestrial infrastructure.
“This development does not come without challenges. Space traffic
management and zero debris spacecraft operations ensure that we
can sustainably continue to make use of the space environment.
Likewise, resilience, especially from a cybersecurity
perspective, is a key feature in times of growing geopolitical
tensions and increasingly hostile cyber-threats.
“Working with our member states’ national governments, the
European Space Agency is driving forward the technical
developments necessary to achieve sustainable and resilient
mission operations for Europe.”
ESA Cybersecurity Framework plans
Dr Fischer will be speaking at 10.05 EET on Day Two (Thursday 2
November) of this year’s Software Defined Space
Conference and will explain the ESA’s Cybersecurity
Framework, and also outline the organisation’s plans to ensure
long-term resilience of its own and other European space assets
in general, including important technology research in the
domain.
“The deployment of a Cybersecurity Operations Centre at the
European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) and the European Space
Security and Education
Centre (ESEC) will deliver to
Europe a capability to detect cybersecurity attacks to the
end-to-end space infrastructure,” explained Dr Fischer.
“Understanding that most cyber-attacks on space infrastructure
target ground-based systems and assets, the European Ground
Operations System Multi-Mission Generation (EGOS-MG) will enable
fully secure operations of multiple spacecraft and missions at
the same time, creating synergies while maintaining the necessary
security posture.
“Research and development in ground segment cybersecurity
capabilities is fundamental to address the needs of future
missions,” he continued. “ESA is pushing development in the area
of zero-trust ground segments, secure space-link communications,
space cybersecurity engineering framework, as well as key
developments in adjacent technology fields such as Artificial
Intelligence and Digitalisation. Finally, through its OPS-SAT
programme, ESA and Europe are constantly executing
cybersecurity-based experiments to understand better space
cybersecurity attack and defence techniques and the associate
technologies.”