“If in 2030, in accordance with our plans, we can put it into orbit, it will be a colossal breakthrough,” Interfax news agency quoted Roscosmos chief Dmitry Rogozin as saying. “The will is there to take a new step in world manned space exploration.”
Russian cosmonauts have worked with counterparts from the United States and 16 other countries about the ISS since 1998 — one of the closest fields of cooperation between Moscow and Washington, whose relations are currently in deep crisis over human rights, cyberattacks and a range of other issues.
Deputy Prime Minister Yuri Borisov told Russian TV at the weekend that Moscow would give notice to its partners that it would leave the ISS project from 2025.
Rogozin said the Russian station, unlike the ISS, would most likely not be permanently crewed because its orbit path would expose it to higher radiation.
But cosmonauts would visit it and it would also use artificial intelligence and robots.
He said Russia was ready to consider allowing foreign crews to visit, “but the station must be national… if you want to do well, do it yourself.”
Interfax quoted an unnamed source as saying that Russia planned to spend up to $6 billion to get the project launched.