Swedish National Space Agency

The Swedish National Space Agency (SNSA, Swedish: Rymdstyrelsen) is a Government agency in Sweden operating under the Swedish Ministry of Education and Science. SNSA distributes government grants to research and development, initiates research and development in space and remote sensing, and is the Swedish contact in international cooperation. SNSA has twenty-one employees (2018) and its office is situated in the Solna Municipality, within Stockholm.[2] Rymdstyrelsen changed its English name from Swedish National Space Board to Swedish National Space Agency in 2018.[3]

Swedish National Space Agency
Formation1972
Legal statusGovernment Organisation
PurposeManage Swedish state-financed space activities
Location
Region served
Sweden
Director-General
Anna Rathsman
Budget
1 123 356 000 SEK[1] (2019)
Staff
21 staff
Websitewww.rymdstyrelsen.se

Space programme

The Swedish space programme is mostly carried out through international cooperation. Out of a yearly budget of approximately 900 Mkr (100 M€), about 70% is used to support ESA programmes of importance to Sweden. The programme has included a sequence of satellite missions, both national ones and in cooperation with other nations.

In February 2013, a government audit was released by the Swedish National Audit Office which concluded that "Swedish space investment is distributed among multiple organizations that operate as stovepipes with no real communication between them and no common ambition."[4] While approximately 1 billion Swedish krona (US$158 million) is spent each year on Swedish space initiatives, the audit report calls for additional "government oversight of the European Space Agency (ESA) and a review of the Swedish Space Corporation's structure and mission."[4]

Satellite missions

  • Viking (1986−1987), to explore plasma processes in the magnetosphere and the ionosphere
  • Freja (1992−1995), a second space physics mission
  • Astrid 1 (1995), microsatellite for space physics
  • Astrid 2 (1998–1999), microsatellite for space physics
  • Odin (2001−present), Swedish-Canadian-Finnish-French satellite for astronomy and atmospheric chemistry
  • Prisma (2010−present), technology test of constellation flight
  • Mats (2019), investigating atmospheric waves[5]

Directors

YearsName
1972−1979Hans Håkansson
1979−1989Jan Stiernstedt
1989−1998Kerstin Fredga
1998−2009Per Tegnér
2009−2018Olle Norberg
2018–present Anna Rathsman
gollark: They have some control thing which lets you select the bucket you're in in the A/B tests they do.
gollark: For now, anyway.
gollark: I disabled that using the seeeecret experiments menu.
gollark: I agree, they sometimes make good changes somehow.
gollark: I mean, the random constants are *not* easily memorable, but you can just check what they are from a REPL.

See also

References

  1. https://www.rymdstyrelsen.se/en/
  2. "Contact us - Rymdstyrelsen". www.rymdstyrelsen.se. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
  3. "Home - Rymdstyrelsen". www.rymdstyrelsen.se. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
  4. "Report Calls for Sweeping Rethink of Swedish Space Spending". Space News. 2013-02-14. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  5. "MATS Satellite - Rymdstyrelsen". www.rymdstyrelsen.se. Retrieved 2018-06-12.
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