International Moon Day gives boost to peaceful cooperation in space | UN News
The UN celebrated the second ever annual International Moon Day on Thursday, promoting ongoing international cooperation in the peaceful use of outer space while also honouring historic achievements in space exploration.
In October 1967, the UN Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, also entered into force.
Among other stipulations, the treaty – seen by many as the “Magna Carta of space” - forbids States from placing weapons of mass destruction on any satellite or celestial body, or from enforcing claims of national sovereignty in outer space.
Today, the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) is responsible for promoting international cooperation in the peaceful utilization of outer space.
UNOOSA serves as the Secretariat for the General Assembly's only committee dealing exclusively with international cooperation in the peaceful uses of space: through the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS).
A new era of engagement
Many national space agencies and corporate entities have begun to recognize the economic potential of lunar exploration, particularly regarding the establishment of radiocommunications technologies on the moon.
In 2021, the UN’s International Telecommunication Union (ITU) established the Space Frequency Coordination Group (SFCG) to coordinate a multinational effort focusing on space research, space operations, and radioastronomy in addition to Earth exploration, meteorological, radionavigation, and inter-satellite technologies.
“Peaceful relations and orderly international cooperation over space radiocommunication allocations are essential, whether for multinational or commercial missions,” said the ITU.
International effort
The United States space agency, NASA, has also led a separate multinational coalition called the Artemis program that draws on the UN’s 1967 outer space treaty to establish a “sustainable and robust” presence on the moon, the ITU highlights.
“Peaceful relations and orderly international cooperation over space radiocommunication allocations are essential, whether for multinational or commercial missions,” said Cathy Sham, who heads the ITU expert group for space radiocommunication applications, discussing NASA’s Artemis programme.
“NASA and its fellow space agencies envisage continued research to improve human lives and satisfy the human quest for knowledge of our universe. The exploration missions that support such research would not be possible without ITU’s work,” she said.
UNOOSA has identified numerous ways in which these international space exploration programs can help meet UN Sustainable Development Goals.
