Nigeria wants to send a Man to the Moon
Have you heard
of the Nigerian National Space Research and Development Agency (NASRDA),
Nigeria’s space program? They are doing something that is really of concern..
In an
interview with CNN, the director general of NASRDA, S. O. Mohammed, discusses
his plans, and why the space program is important.
“We have
always said… the Nigerian space program is not going to be an ego trip,” he
begins.
“We are not
part of the race for the moon, we’re not part the race for Mars. What we need
to look at is using the space program to look at how we can create typical
Nigerian solutions to most of our problems.”
Mohammed
wants a locally designed and built satellite by 2018, the launch of a satellite
from the Nigerian territory by 2030, and, after that, Mohammed wants Nigeria to
put a man on the moon.
Of course,
there are several questions plaguing his plans. What’s the point of a satellite
program in a country with 70% of its population living below the poverty line?
What’s the point of having a man on the moon more than 60 years after the U.S
did it?
But Mohammed lists the benefits of Nigeria’s
existing 3 satellite programs: the documentation of the regional climate change
patterns, updating of the country’s maps, and tracking the movements of
terrorist group Boko Haram.
Next on
Mohammed’s list is the launching of a Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), a
satellite capable of penetrating cloud coverage.
This financial
year, NASRDA has been granted $20 million, but needs $65 million more to launch
its next satellite.
The money
will be put to good use, Mohammed says.
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