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International Space Station news - 2014

International Space Station agency heads joint statement

The heads of agencies gathered for a photo

The heads of agencies gathered for a photo during a meeting held in Paris on November 4, 2014 to discuss the utilization of the International Space Station (ISS). From left to right: President of JAXA, Naoki Okumura, DG of ESA, Jean-Jacques Dordain, Oleg Ostapenko, Head of Roscosmos (Russian Federal Space Agency), Charles Bolden, Administrator of NASA and Gilles Leclerc, Director General, Space Exploration, CSA. (Credit: NASA)

The Heads of the ISS agencies from Canada, Europe, Japan, Russia and the United States conferred on November 4, 2014.

Recognizing the full mission breadth of the ISS from research that benefits all of humanity, to technology development, to expanding commercial use of low Earth orbit, to enhancing international cooperation and understanding, the agency Heads reaffirmed their support for continued ISS operations.

The Heads discussed the many ways that research on ISS is benefitting people on Earth from biomedical breakthroughs to new materials and technologies. The international partnership is increasing scientific output of the space station through collaboration to meet the needs of the expanding user community and serve as a foundation for future exploration endeavors.

The ISS partner agencies are working through their respective governmental procedures for continued ISS utilization through at least 2020 and noted the U.S. commitment to extend ISS utilization to at least 2024. They also noted the ongoing work by other governments for a similar extension. In reviewing the strong commitment that enabled nearly 14 years of continuous human presence on ISS in low-Earth orbit, the agency leaders noted the stable, solid, and robust ISS partnership that will serve as the basis for working together in future human exploration.

The Heads reaffirmed the ISS is the foundation for human exploration beyond low-Earth orbit highlighting its technical, scientific, and developmental capabilities. The ISS partnership will continue to advance the use of the ISS for the benefit of humanity.

The dimensions of the ISS

How big is the ISS

Credit: Canadian Space Agency

How big is the International Space Station? NASA says it's as big as a football field, but in Canada we speak hockey!

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