UK independent space agency scrapped to cut costs
UK independent space agency scrapped to cut costs But one leading space scientist said the move would lead to disruption in the short term and the UK losing ground to its international competitors over the long run. The government says this will save money, cut duplication and ensure ministerial oversight. It will be absorbed by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) in April 2026.
"Around the world countries have been recognising the importance of space by setting up national space agencies, and for the government to be scrapping ours seems like a backward step," he said.
Tim Peake was the first and only British astronaut to serve on the International Space Station under UKSA's tenure UKSA was created 2010 in response to the growing importance of the sector to the economy. The development of small spacecraft, satellites and space instrumentation is a field that the UK excels at, thanks in part due to the agency. Its role is to develop the country's space strategy, coordinate research and commercial activities and liaise with international partners. During its tenure UKSA saw a UK astronaut, Tim Peake, launched into space to work on the International Space Station and the development of Britain's own capability to launch small satellites and other small payloads into space from Scotland.
The space sector generates an estimated £18.
6bn a year and employs 55,000 people across the country. The agency, its budget and activities will now be absorbed into DSIT. It follows a commitment from Prime Minister Keir Starmer to reduce costs and cut the number of arms length government bodies, known as quangos (quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisations), starting with the abolition of NHS England announced in March.
The merger will see the agency become a unit within DSIT, staffed by experts from both organisations and retaining the UKSA name.
They fear there is a danger of moving to more bureaucratic, less incentivised ways of working, which were more typical of government departments, and were the reason the agency was created in the first place. "It feels like we're going to get stuck in the mud again," Dr Barber told BBC News
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Raw_Score: 67.5
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Factual Score: 35.0
Analysis: Partially supported claims
- Ai_Analysis:
- Final_Score: 67.5
- Analysis_Method:
- Fallacy_Penalty: -10.0
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Reasoning Score: 42.5
Analysis: Strong reasoning