A New Race For Space: Look Out For Nigeria
Brazil
BUDGET: $53.6 MILLION
One of its satellite rockets exploded on the launchpad last August, killing 21. Still, Brazil's President vowed that the country would launch its first rocket before 2006.
China
BUDGET: $2 BILLION
In October it became the third nation to send an astronaut into orbit. It wants to land an unmanned vehicle on the moon by 2010--five years before NASA next plans to set foot there.
India
BUDGET: $450 MILLION
Its largely civilian aspirations involve communications, agriculture and meteorology. But it wants to explore the moon by 2008.
European Space Agency (Esa)
BUDGET: $3.6 BILLION
Made up of 15 nations, it hopes to land on a comet in 2014 and send a human to Mars by 2033. But its Beagle 2 rover disappeared on the Red Planet on Christmas.
Japan
BUDGET: $1.8 BILLION
With an active program of intelligence-gathering satellites, it will launch a probe to dig into the moon this year and hopes to have a space laboratory completed by 2008.
Britain
BUDGET: $310 MILLION
A member of the ESA, it also has its own program, focusing on robotic exploration, Earth observation and telecommunications.
Nigeria
BUDGET: $22.4 MILLION
Its first satellite was built by Britain and launched by Russia last year but is controlled by Nigerian scientists in the capital, Abuja.
Russia
BUDGET: $188 MILLION
It has launched more vehicles into space than any other nation, but severe budget problems forced it to abandon a moon-flight program.
Most Popular »
- Under U.S. Pressure, Pakistan Balks at Helping on Afghan Taliban
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out
- Rattled by Iran, Arab Regimes Draw Closer
- Crazy Heart Review: Jeff Bridges Abides
- Proposed 'Botox Tax' Draws Wide Array of Opponents
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- Super-Earth: Astronomers Find a Watery New Planet
- Majority U.S. Population Non-White by 2050
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up





RSS