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Bangladesh has inked ‘Artemis Accords’ as a 54th country with the United States’s National Aeronautics and Space Administration focused on non-military space exploration.

The Artemis Accords, established in October 2020, are a set of non-binding agreements designed to promote peaceful and cooperative civil exploration of outer space.


In presence of executive chairman of Bangladesh Investment Development Authority, Chowdhury Ashik Mahmud Bin Harun and Chargé d’Affaires of the US embassy in Dhaka Trucey Ann Jacobson, defence secretary Md Ashraf Uddin inked the accords at a city hotel in Dhaka on Tuesday.

With this move, Bangladesh has aligned itself with global efforts to advance scientific discovery protect space heritage, and responsibly utilise space resources, contributing to Bangladesh’s national development goals.

In his speech, Chowdhury Ashik said that the signing of accords had begun a new chapter in space research collaboration between Bangladesh and the United States.

Through this, he said that Bangladesh would able to accelerate its space research activities.

Ashraf Uddin said that the purpose of these accords were a practical set of non-binding principles, guidelines and best practices grounded in the treaty on principles governing the activities of states in the exploration and use of outer space, including the moon and other celestial bodies, outer space treaty, and other existing instruments such as the registration convention and agreement on the rescue and return of astronauts, to ensure safe, transparent, and sustainable civil space exploration.

‘With a view to promoting space science and technology, Bangladesh established SPARRSO in 1980. Since then, Bangladesh follows the international rules and norms on the peaceful use of space’ he added.

 In signing the Artemis Accords, he said that countries had committed to follow these principles, the implementation of which was designed to promote safe, sustainable and transparent activities in space.

As of January 21, 2025, 53 countries have signed the accords, including the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, India, the United Arab Emirates and Australia.

By signing the accords, Bangladesh will be a part of prestigious international space alliances, he mentioned.

He said that Bangladesh would be greatly benefited in terms of technology transfer, economic cooperation and scientific collaboration through the accords.

It will open the window to cooperate and collaborate between the SPARRSO and the NASA and will enhance the current capacity of the SPARRSO to accelerate the space mission, he added.

Ashraf Uddin said that if Bangladesh collaborateed with the NASA and other space agencies it would allow Bangladesh to gain access to cutting-edge space technology, satellite systems and scientific research.

This could also help to enhance Bangladesh’s own satellite programme and future space initiatives, he added.

He said that Bangladesh could accelerate the development of its space research institutions, such as the SPARRSO.

 It could get technical assistance to develop its own earth observation and climate monitoring satellites, which were crucial for managing disasters like-floods and cyclones, he added.

Bangladeshi universities and scientists would get opportunities to collaborate with top global institutions on space research and innovation, he said, adding that students could get benefit from NASA training programmes, scholarships and exchange programmes.

 Among others, chief of protocol and director general of North America Wing at Ministry of Foreign Affairs AFM Zahid-Ul-Islam and chairman of the Bangladesh Space Research and Remote Sensing Organisation Md Rashedul Islam were present on the occasion.