The foreign minister has said that Hungary has gained enough experience in the space industry over the past years to be in a position to become a key player in the sector.
Speaking to MTI after a visit to France’s space agency in Toulouse, Péter Szijjártó said there were several Hungarian companies taking part in major international development and technological projects. France is a leading country in space development, he said, noting that the country’s National Centre for Space Studies (CNES) was the world’s second largest national space agency after NASA. France also accounts for 40 percent of Europe’s space industry, he added.
Minister Szijjártó said Hungary had signed a cooperation agreement with the French space agency that will see the two countries carry out joint satellite technology, space science and space research projects. As part of the deal, young Hungarian experts will be given a chance to participate in the projects carried out at the CNES and expand their knowledge, he said.
The minister called it a “huge success” for Hungary that France’s major satellite developer firms have involved two Hungarian companies in designing the interior equipment and supplying the insulation materials for their satellites. “This is a huge recognition and it demonstrates that it was not by chance that we’ve made the space industry one of the priority sectors when it comes to ensuring Hungary’s future economic competitiveness,” Minister Szijjártó said.
The minister also noted that Hungary wants to send an astronaut to the International Space Station by 2025. Hungary is cooperating with Russia on achieving this goal but has also offered to make the future Hungarian astronaut’s research capacities available to Europe’s aerospace association, he added.
Photo credit: 444.hu