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Russian Moon base plan falls victim to budget cuts

The government is scaling back spending in sectors including health and welfare

Dmitry Solovyov
Moscow
Tuesday 29 December 2015 14:16 EST
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One of the Ruby stars of the Kremlin towers in Moscow is silhouetted by a full moon
One of the Ruby stars of the Kremlin towers in Moscow is silhouetted by a full moon (Getty)

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Russia is to revise its space programme, the national space agency has said, after it emerged that billions of pounds of cuts could hit Moon exploration plans.

Several government ministries were engaged in revising the space programme up to 2025, Roscosmos said. Reports in the newspaper Izvestia suggested Russia’s prestigious space programme may also have fallen victim to government cuts.

Buffeted by low oil prices, Western sanctions and a plunging rouble, the government is scaling back spending in sectors including health and welfare. Izvestia published details of what it said was a draft proposal by Roscosmos for big spending cuts to the Moon exploration programme.

In April last year Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin announced that Moscow planned to build a big Moon base which would serve as a platform for scientific research. Izvestia reported that Roscosmos was proposing to cut the manned flights segment of lunar exploration but said funding to build a spaceship to fly to the Moon would not suffer seriously.

Roscosmos declined to say whether the Moon base plans were still alive, but said the first manned flight around the Moon would not take place before 2029.

Reuters

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