Japan's space agency,
JAXA, is drawing up plans to develop a robot to conduct probes on the moon by
2015, then begin constructing a solar-powered manned research base on the
planet and design a reusable manned space
vessel like the U.S. space
shuttle by 2025, the Mainichi Shimbun said.
The space agency's budget could be boosted six-fold to $57 billion to
assist those plans, the Mainichi said.
The plans also include
using satellites to send information on evacuation routes, locators on people's
whereabouts and alerts to cell phones in the event of major emergencies like a
tsunami, the daily said.
JAXA officials were
unavailable for immediate comment late Monday.
Japan has long focused on
unmanned scientific probes. In a major policy switch last year, however, a
government panel recommended that the country consider its own manned space program.
Long Asia's leading spacefaring nation, Japan has been struggling to get out
from under the shadow of China, which put its first astronaut into orbit in
October 2003. Beijing has since announced it is aiming for the moon.
One month after China's
breakthrough, a Japanese H-2A rocket carrying two spy satellites malfunctioned
after liftoff, forcing controllers to end its mission in a spectacular
fireball.
Further
launches were put on hold for 15 months, but on Saturday Japan took a big step
to re-establish the credibility of its space
program with the successful launch of a domestically designed H-2A rocket that
placed a communications satellite into orbit.