Space Challenge lands in Lower Hutt
Some of the best brains working in the space-related
sector in New Zealand (companies, start-ups, universities
etc) are competing in the inaugural New Zealand Space
Challenge
Six of the entrants from Wellington to Taranaki and Manawatu will be pitching their ideas, which include virtual and augmented reality, robotics and artificial intelligence, at a regional final at the Dowse Art Museum on Tuesday 15 May as part of Hutt STEMM Festival. The winner from the greater Wellington region will receive six months of incubation and mentoring.
This first challenge, with a $40,000 prize, ties space exploration to seeking innovative technological solutions to navigation problems in Antarctica as an analogue for future space exploration. The Challenge is seeking applications that can, among other things, leverage space technology to solve these challenges.
The Space Challenge offers a cash prize and commercialisation support for the most innovative solutions to enable safer, more efficient navigation across Antarctic ice using satellite data and sensors operating in the extreme environments. "The goal of the challenge is to incentivise a space community all around New Zealand," says Space Challenge co-founder Emeline Paat-Dahlstrom.
The co-founder of Space Base and the Space Challenge initiative, along with husband, astronomer and space engineer, Eric Dahlstrom, she says that New Zealand is a good place to prototype a new space industry and ecosystem, with Rocket Lab already showing potential, as access to space is increasingly democratised.
The
New Zealand Space Challenge regional pitch competition is
part of the Hutt STEMM Festival and the public is welcome to
attend this free event. http://www.huttstemm.nz/
There are now over 100
different space-related businesses and entities in New
Zealand. The New Zealand Space Agency