Ottawa won't back Canadian-built Mars rover
The federal government has turned down a request by Canada's space industry to support a contract that would have allowed thecompanies to build the European Space Agency's Mars surface rover, CBC News has learned.
The decision stunned the companies andhas leftthe ESAscrambling to find a new partner, as no European firm is adequately prepared to match the technical abilities of Canadian firms to buildits ExoMars rover.
The ESA wanted Canadian space companies — considered world leaders in robotics— to build the rover for its planned exploration of Mars by 2015. The rover would have a far more sophisticated robotics package than the current U.S. platforms in use.
In July, the companies made an impassioned presentation to federal Industry Ministry officials for a clearer mandate for the Canadian Space Agency, which included making the Mars rover project its top priority, the CBC's Henry Champ reported on Thursday.
The project required no additional funding from Ottawa, but was contingent upon $100 million over 10 years from the existing CSA budget being redirected to the program by restructuring priorities and cancelling or postponing other projects, according to documents obtained by the CBC.
But just a few short weeks after the presentation, Industry Minister Maxime Bernier told the companies the government hadn't made up its mind about the future of Canada's space role and didn't want to go forward with the project.
The project had the approval of the United States, which also wanted Canada to continue its robotics role and had signed off on Canadian firms to design at least the robotics component on equipment and vehicles used on its planned mission to the moon in 2020.
Canada has never failed with any project it has handled for NASA, which has earned it the trust of the U.S. as it gathers international support for its space programs.
Firms fear brain drain
As with the ESA rover offer, which expired in September, Canada's role in the U.S. moon colonization program remains uncertain.
In the July presentation, the companies pleaded with the government to appoint a new president of the CSA to give leadership to the agency that they say is needed to defend Canada's future in space.
The position has been left vacant for more than a year after Marc Garneau resigned to run for the Liberals in the last federal election.
The rover decision has the companies threatening to take their operations south of the border, which observers fear could lead to a brain drain of Canadian designers and scientists similar to the one suffered in the wake of the abrupt cancellation of the Avro Arrow fighter-interceptor program in 1959.