Euractiv.com with Reuters Est. 3min 06-03-2024 Content-Type: News Service News Service Produced externally by an organization we trust to adhere to journalistic standards. File photo. Roscosmos State Space Corporation Director General Yuri Borisov attends a plenary session of the Army-2022 International Military and Technical Forum held in the Patriot Park, in Kubinka outside Moscow, Russia, 15 August 2022. [EPA-EFE/MAXIM SHIPENKOV] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Print Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram Russia and China are considering putting a nuclear power plant on the moon from 2033-35, Yuri Borisov, the head of Russia’s space agency Roscosmos said on Tuesday (5 March), something he said could one day allow lunar settlements to be built. Borisov, a former deputy defence minister, said that Russia and China had been jointly working on a lunar programme and that Moscow was able to contribute with its expertise on “nuclear space energy”. “Today we are seriously considering a project – somewhere at the turn of 2033-2035 – to deliver and install a power unit on the lunar surface together with our Chinese colleagues,” Borisov said. Solar panels would not be able to provide enough electricity to power future lunar settlements, he said, while nuclear power could. “This is a very serious challenge…it should be done in automatic mode, without the presence of humans,” he said of the possible plan. Borisov spoke also of Russian plans to build a nuclear-powered cargo spaceship. He said all the technical questions concerning the project had been solved apart from finding a solution on how to cool the nuclear reactor. “We are indeed working on a space tugboat. This huge, cyclopean structure that would be able, thanks to a nuclear reactor and a high-power turbines…to transport large cargoes from one orbit to another, collect space debris and engage in many other applications,” Borisov said. Russian officials have spoken before of ambitious plans to one day mine on the Moon, but the Russian space programme has suffered a series of setbacks in recent years. Its first moon mission in 47 years failed last year after Russia’s Luna-25 spacecraft spun out of control and crashed. Russia's Luna-25 spacecraft crashes on the Moon The Luna-25 spacecraft, Russia’s first Moon mission in almost 50 years, has crashed on the Earth’s natural satellite after an unspecified incident during pre-landing manoeuvres, the Russian space agency Roscosmos said Sunday (20 August). Moscow has said it will launch further lunar missions and then explore the possibility of a joint Russian-China crewed mission and even a lunar base. China said last month it aimed to put the first Chinese astronaut on the moon before 2030. Russian President Vladimir Putin last month dismissed a warning by the United States that Moscow planned to put nuclear weapons in space as false, saying it was a ploy to draw Russia into arms negotiations on the West’s terms. Russia seen as highly unlikely to put a nuclear warhead in space The space-based weapon US intelligence believes Russia may be developing is more likely a nuclear-powered device to blind, jam or fry the electronics inside satellites than an explosive nuclear warhead to shoot them down, analysts said on Thursday (15 February). Read more with Euractiv How NATO's Northern enlargement changes the power balance in the region With Finland, and most recently Sweden, joining NATO, the strategic situation in the Baltic Sea region and on the Western military alliance's Northern Flank is changing radically, but Russia still poses a threat above and below water. Subscribe now to our newsletter EU Elections Decoded Email Address * Politics Newsletters