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[i]ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain had hoped to confirm to NASA by the end of 2010 that ESA will continue its space station partnership until at least 2020. A continuation means paying Europe's share of slightly more than 8 percent of the station's common operating costs. How to distribute that charge among ESA governments has been a subject of negotiations for several months. Germany, as the station's biggest supporter at ESA, wanted the agency to secure backing for a full station program between 2010 and 2020, which German officials estimated would cost 3.8 billion euros. It is unlikely that a full 10-year commitment will be forthcoming in March, European government officials said. But a two-year program, coupled with a formal European commitment to continue its station partnership to 2020, is well within reach, they said. But it was not possible to reach a decision at the December council because ESA had agreed that the Arianespace-aid issue and the station's extension would be tethered together to better ensure that both are resolved.[/i]
[i]"SpaceX certainly got our attention," [ESA's space station director Simonetta] di Pippo said of the Dec. 8 launch, by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, of the company's Dragon unmanned cargo carrier on a demonstration flight. "This is a kind of revolution. We now know they can make it, and so we have to concentrate, on the government side, on new developments. We cannot just stick with our ATV now that the commercial sector is able to do this. Having visited the SpaceX facilities, I am not surprised by their success. But we need to react to it."[/i]
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