The
Russian prime minister Dmitry Medvedev yesterday appointed Oleg
Ostapenko as new director of the country’s crisis-ridden space agency, Roscosmos.
Colonel-General Oleg Ostapenko
the new head of the Russian Space Agency
Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation
Ostapenko, formerly a deputy defense minister in the Russian
government, succeeds Vladimir Popovkin, who has been at the helm of
Roscosmos since 2011.
“Now you will have time to engage in a different dimension,” Medvedev told Ostapenko at a meeting on 10 October.
Congratulating him on his new job, Medvedev expressed hope that “a
number of problems in the activities of the Russian federal space
agency” will be overcome with the arrival of a new director.
Russia’s space programme has suffered a series of spectacular setbacks in recent years.
In July, a Proton-M carrier rocket crashed seconds after launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, destroying three navigation satellites.
Another Proton-M rocket carrying satellites for Russia’s space-based positioning system Glonass had failed to launch in December 2010.
Medvedev publicly reprimanded Popovkin in August for the
shortcomings in his agency’s performance. But his replacement might
foreshadow more far-reaching reforms of the Russian space sector, say
analysts. According to reports,
the government intends to set up a new corporation that would be in
charge of Russia’s entire rocket and space industry. Roscosmos would
merely remain in charge of policy.
For Russia, maintaining its position as a leading space nation is a
scientific and economic priority and a matter of national pride. In an
effort to remain on top of the game, Vladimir Putin announced in spring plans to invest US$ 52 billion in the nation’s space programme by 2020.

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