The Legal Framework For The International Space Station
The Legal Framework For The International Space Station
The Legal Framework For The International Space Station
International Space Station
United Nations Committee on the Peaceful
Uses of Outer Space Legal Subcommittee
April 17, 2013
Diane St‐Arnaud Andre Farand
CSA ESA
Motoko Uchitomi Robin J. Frank
JAXA NASA
Igor Porokhin
For Roscosmos
OVERVIEW
1. Introduction
2. “Cooperating Agencies”
3. Funding
4. Liability
5. Jurisdiction and Control Over Persons
6. Usefulness of IGA in Facilitating Cooperative
Activities
7. Legal Framework for Commercial Use of the ISS
8. Space Flight Participants
9. Use of ISS for Space Exploration Beyond Low Earth
Orbit
2
Legal Framework governing ISS Cooperation
3
Political dimension of Cooperation: Article 1 of IGA
the United States and Russia will produce elements serving as the
foundation of the ISS;
the European Partner and Japan will produce elements that will
significantly enhance ISS’s capabilities;
Canada’s contribution will be an essential part of the ISS;
¾ The Partners will join their efforts, under the lead role of the United
States for overall management and coordination to create an
integrated ISS.
4
United Nations Outer Space Treaties
5
Additional Arrangements/Instruments
6
Article
Article 44 :: Cooperating
Cooperating Partner
Agencies
Agencies Canada (Article 3)
Russia
8
Liability: Introduction
Each Partner assumes the risks that are inherent to participation in ISS-
related activities
A Partner shall not make any claims against another Partner or against
its “related entities” (i.e. contractors and subcontractors at all tiers,
users or customers at all tiers, and contractors and subcontractors of
the users and of the customers at all tiers) for damages that it may
suffer from ISS-related activities, save for a few exceptions
Page 11 02/11/2012
Covered activities
The cross-waiver seeks not only to prevent claims by Partners, but also
seeks to prevent claims made by their related entities against the other
Partners or against the other Partners’ related entities
Page 13 02/11/2012
Exceptions
Page 14 02/11/2012
Interaction with the Liability
Convention
Partners remain liable under the Liability Convention, save as
otherwise provided in Article 16 of the IGA. (Article 17)
Page 15 02/11/2012
Liability: Conclusion
The ISS liability regime has been crafted to co-exist with the Liability
Convention
Page 16 02/11/2012
Jurisdiction and Control - General
¾ The IGA provides that each of the Cooperating Agencies shall own
the elements that the Partners respectively provide (i.e. ISS user
and resource elements listed in the Annex to the IGA) and also the
equipment in or on the Space Station;
17
Rule for jurisdiction and control over personnel
18
Exercising jurisdiction and control through ESA
¾ It provides among other things that: «The Partners agree that … the
European Space Agency (hereinafter « ESA ») for the European
Governments, … shall be the Cooperating Agencies responsible for
implementing Space Station cooperation»;
19
Jurisdiction and control over ESA astronauts
20
The ISS Crew Code of Conduct (CCOC)
21
Criminal jurisdiction (Article 22 of the IGA)
IGA Art. 18: Customs and Immigration
¾Facilitate the movement of persons and goods.
¾Facilitate provision of the appropriate entry and residence
documentation.
¾Grant permission for duty‐free importation and exportation.
zcontribute to the smooth and speedy implementation,
avoiding “bureaucratic delay”
zsave the financial & procedural costs to facilitate
international cooperation
23
IGA Art. 19: Exchange of Data and Goods
IGA Art. 20: Treatment of Data and Goods
¾ Facilitate exchange and transit of technical data and goods necessary to
implement the ISS cooperation.
¾ Provide clear mechanism for the treatment of
‐ technical data and goods protected for export control purposes
‐ technical data protected for proprietary rights purposes
¾ These protected data and goods should be marked with a notice, or otherwise
specifically identified.
¾ Restriction of the utilization of the protected data and goods
‐ used only for fulfilling responsibility under the IGA/MOUs.
‐ used only by the receiving Cooperating Agency and its contractors and
subcontractors.
¾ Partner States are not required to transfer any technical data and goods in
contravention of its national laws or regulations
z Facilitate smooth and speedy implementation
z Realize exchanging protected data and goods necessary for the cooperation
z Provides necessary protection to promote utilization by providing clear scheme
for the users 24
Allocation of Utilization Rights & Resources
User accommodation rights (MOU8.3.a)
CSA CSA CSA
2.3% 2.3% 2.3% RSA
NASA NASA 100%
46.7% 46.7% of its
NASA
segment
97.7% ESA GOJ
51% 51%
US laboratory and European Japanese Russian
external payloads laboratory laboratory laboratory
IGA 9
Utilization resources & Share of the CSOC (MOU 8.3.b & MOU 9.3) Utilization rights
CSA 2.3% are derived from
ESA 8.3% Partner provision
NASA
GOJ 76.6%
12.8% RSA of user elements &
infrastructure elements
100%
NASA 76.6%
JEM Airlock
・ Transfer equipments
to/from exposed area
Exposed Facility
・ Only full-scale external experiment area on ISS
・ 10 attachment ports for experiment payloads
・ Various resources provided
(Power, Communication and Thermal control)
26
ISS Utilization Outcomes
Example
Example11 Example
Example22
Contribution
Contributionto
toNew
NewMedicine
MedicineDevelopment
Development Commercial
Commercialfilm
filmshooting
shooting
A high-quality protein crystal was generated in JAXA is actively promoting the utilization of JEM
KIBO, and then minute three-dimensional including commercial use.
structure data was acquired on the ground.
In collaboration with RSA, commercial film
Revealing unknown protein structure which shooting on board the ISS was successfully
causes illness helps effective selection of completed in 2001, which was the first Japanese
appropriate medicine candidate. mission of the ISS commercialization.
Development of
remedies for all
types of influenza Advertisement film Shot on board the HDTV Camera on board the
virus ISS
ISS
ⓒDENTSU INC. &
Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co.,Ltd. HDCAM HDW‐700A ⓒSony
Such utilization by companies can be
realized
Clarifying the onset Development of a thanks to the clear conditions for the
mechanism of Alzheimer’s remedy for muscular implementation, rights and obligations etc.
disease dystrophy provided by IGA/MOUs framework.
(a rare illness)
27
LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR COMMERCIAL USE OF ISS (GENERAL)
• New fields of commercial activities in space:
‐ transportation services for delivery of people and cargo
to space
‐ space tourism
‐ space advertising
‐ space commercial experiments
28
LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR COMMERCIAL USE OF ISS (2)
• Partners have the right to barter or sell any portion of their
respective allocations. The terms and conditions of any
barter or sale shall be determined by the parties to the
transaction (Article 9.2 of IGA).
• Each Partner may use and select users for its allocations for
any purpose consistent with the object of IGA and provisions
set forth in the MOUs and implementing arrangements
(Article 9.3 of IGA).
• Most valuable allocations and services:
power, storage, crew time, EVA capacity,
transportation of people and cargo.
29
PARTICIPATION OF NON‐PARTNERS
• Equipment on the ISS shall not be owned by any non‐Partner
or a private entity under its jurisdiction without the prior
concurrence of other Partners. Any transfer of ownership of
any ISS element to a non‐Partner shall require prior
notification of other Partners (Article 6 (4) of IGA).
• Each Partner may use and select users, except that any
proposed use of a user element by a non‐Partner or private
entity under its jurisdiction shall require the prior notification
to and timely consensus among all Partners through their
Cooperating Agencies (Article 9 (3) of IGA).
30
SPACE FLIGHT PARTICIPANTS (1)
• Astronauts from countries other than ISS Partners (Brazil,
Korea, Malaysia) and space tourists (8 flights)
• Short‐term flights to ISS (up to 10 days) onboard Russian
Soyuz space vehicles with substantial experimental programs
• Coordination process among ISS Partners through ISS
procedures; consent of ISS partners for Non‐Partner SFPs
31
SPACE FLIGHT PARTICIPANTS (2)
• ISS cross‐waiver does not apply to SFPs as natural persons.
SFP shall procure a liability insurance from claims that may be
asserted towards ISS Partners by SFP, his/her heirs,
dependents and insurers.
32
Use of ISS for Space Exploration Beyond Low Earth Orbit
33
Use of ISS for Space Exploration Beyond Low Earth Orbit (cont’d)
34
2012 NASA-ESA Implementing Arrangement
36
¾Questions?
37
¾Thank you!
38
NOTES ON SPEAKERS
¾ CSA: Diane St-Arnaud is Senior Counsel, Manager with Industry Canada Legal Services
since 2006. She is responsible for telecommunications law and is now also responsible for
legal services provided to the Canadian Space Agency. She joined the Government of
Canada in 1988 and worked in the area of radiocommunication regulation, international
telecommunications and telecommunications law. She holds a Master of Laws from the
Institute and Centre of Air and Space Law of McGill University (Canada) and a Diplôme
d'Études europénnes from Université de Nancy (France).
• ESA: Andre Farand is currently Head of the Programme Legal Affairs Division, in the Legal
Department of the European Space Agency, collaborating with four other legal
administrators to provide support to ESA’s programme directorates in setting up and
implementing their optional programmes. He has been involved in negotiations on
International Space Station (ISS) cooperation since the inception of the project in 1987,
both on behalf of the Canadian federal government (Department of External Affairs)
and, starting in 1991, on behalf of the European Partners' cooperating agency (ESA). He
holds a LL.M. from McGill University’s Institute of Air and Space Law in Montreal. His thesis
was on Canada’s claim against the Soviet Union for damage caused by the Cosmos 954
satellite. He is a member of the Bar of Quebec (Canada). He is the author of many
articles, particularly on different aspects of ISS cooperation, and lectures regularly on the
same subjects at various European universities.
•
39
NOTES ON SPEAKERS (CONT’D)
¾ JAXA: Ms. Uchitomi is the Manager, Legal Affairs Division for JAXA since Oct. 2012. Ms.
Uchitomi was part of the Japanese delegation for the IGA negotiations, as a
representative from the Japanese space agency. She served for obtaining the Diet’s
approval of the IGA/MOU at the Ministry of Foreign Affair as a loaned staff member. As
JAXA staff, Ms. Uchitomi participated in various international coordination and projects
under the IGA/MOUS. She graduated from Legal Department of the University of Tokyo,
and holds LLM for International law from Leiden University in the Netherlands. Her thesis for
LLM written in 2000 was issues of the international responsibility and liability for commercial
space activities, based on the interpretation and implementation of space treaties
and comparison of domestic regulations.
¾ NASA: Robin J. Frank has served as Senior Counsel, International Law and Practice
Group, at NASA since 2004. Prior to that time, she worked on international and space law
issues at the Department of Justice, the Department of Defense, and the Department of
State. At NASA she has worked on many cooperation agreements and mechanisms with
the ISS partners. She obtained her Juris Doctor at the New York University School of Law.
40
NOTES ON SPEAKERS (CONT’D)
¾ Roscosmos: Igor Porokhin is an external legal counsel to Russian Federal Space Agency.
As a member of the drafting committee he participated in development of Protocol to
Cape Town Convention on International Interests in Mobile Equipment on Matters
specific to Space Assets and also was a member of the Russian delegation at the
diplomatic conference on adoption of the said Protocol. He served as a legal advisor of
Roscosmos in numerous commercial projects relating to ISS and other space missions.
Igor Porokhin is a correspondent member of the Russian Academy of Cosmonautics , a
member of the Russian Bar Association and honorary member of the Moscow Regional
Bar. He graduated with honors from the Faculty of Law at the University of Moscow, and
also holds a diploma with honors from the Russian Academy for Foreign Trade.
41