SPACE MART SPACE DAILY SPACE WAR TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY SPACE TRAVEL GPS DAILY ENERGY DAILY
  Space Industry and Business News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
European Space Firm Hitches Up With Russians

In 2008, Starsem is to begin launching Soyuz rockets from its home base, which is much closer to the equator than Baikonur and thus better for putting satellites into geostationary orbit.

Baikonur, Kazakhstan (AFP) Aug 15, 2005
In its fight to remain on top of the worldwide market for satellite launches, the European group Arianespace is allying itself with Russian rivals, whose rockets and launch sites are complementary with its own.

When on Sunday the company's Starsem division launched Galaxy-14, a two-tonne US telecommunications satellite, the lift-off took place not at Arianespace's usual site at Kourou in French Guiana, and not atop one of the European Space Agency's Ariane range of launchers.

The US satellite went up on a Soyuz rocket from this Kazakh space center, just three days after Arianespace placed the Thaicom-4 satellite in orbit atop an Ariane-5 rocket from Kourou.

At 6.2 tonnes, Thaicom-4 was the heaviest commercial satellite ever built.

"Our policy is to offer a range" of launch possibilities, said Jean-Yves Le Gall, the managing director of Arianespace who supervised both launches.

His company aimed to lift "all kinds of satellites into all kinds of orbits," he said.

Arianespace added to its own launch capacities in 1996 by creating Starsem, a Euro-Russian company which holds exclusive rights to international operations for Soyuz rockets.

Arianespace owns 15 percent of the company, while the European company's parent group EADS holds 35 percent, the Russian federal space agency Roscosmos has a 25-percent stake and Russia's Samara space centre holds the remaining 25 percent.

A venerable workhorse among launch vehicles, Soyuz models have been fired into space 1,669 times, with a success rate of 98 percent since the historic first flight with the Soviet Sputnik satellite in 1957.

"Soyuz is becoming more and more integrated into the range of Arianespace launchers," Le Gall told reporters.

The Ariane series used in Kourou currently comprises the Ariane-5, used for launches of more than three tonnes, and the Ariane-5 ECA, which can carry a payload of 10 tonnes, the equivalent of two big satellites.

In 2008, the company is to begin launching Soyuz rockets from its home base, which is much closer to the equator than Baikonur and thus better for putting satellites into geostationary orbit.

The combination allows Arianespace to offer greater availability than its main competitor, International Launch Services of the United States, which uses another Russian rocket, the Proton.

The Galaxy-14, launched for the US operator PanAmsat, "was to have been launched by an Ariane-5 but for reasons of availability, we decided to go with a Soyuz," Le Gall said.

Galaxy-15 is scheduled to go up in late September aboard an Ariane rocket. On that occasion it will share the payload compartment with Syracuse 3A, a 3.8-tonne French military telecoms satellite.

In all, five Ariane-5 launches have been programmed for this year from Kourou, of which two have already taken place, along with three Soyuz shots from Baikonur.

The fifth of those Ariane launches could nonetheless be delayed until early 2006, Le Gall said.

By the end of the year, Soyuz is to launch the European Space Agency's Venus Express probe and a demonstration model of the future European navigation satellite Galileo.

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Related Links
Starsem
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express
The latest information about the Commercial Satellite Industry


Orbcomm's Equity Financings Complete
Bremen, Germany (SPX) Jan 06, 2006
OHB Technology affiliated company Orbcomm has announced that it has completed equity financings totaling over $110 million led by Pacific Corporate Group (PCG), which committed $60 million. New investors, in addition to PCG, include investment firms MH Equity Investors and Torch Hill Capital.






Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • Wireless World: Chips Track License Plates
  • Connexion By Boeing, Intel Efforts Boost Hotspots In The Sky
  • Japan Plans Giant Broadband Satellite
  • Podcasting Changing The Face Of Politics

  • US Satellite Successfully Placed In Orbit
  • Largest Communications Satellite Ever Built Launched Into Orbit
  • Sea Launch wins Multiple Launch Award with PanAmSat
  • Land Launch Receives First Order with PanAmSat

  • Airbus Considers Building Manufacturing Plant In China
  • Air France Plane Hit By Lightning Before Crash: Passengers
  • Rolls-Royce Shares Rocket On Strong Profits, Dividend News
  • Imaging Technique Reduces Structural Component Failures

  • French Military Communications Satellite Launch Expected In September
  • Testing On Schedule Of Downlink Phased Array On AEHF Model
  • Northrop Grumman Signs Contract With United Kingdom For E-3D AWACS Support Program
  • Globecomm and IPIX to Offer Global Satellite, Wireless Surveillance Solutions

  • New Way Found To Cool Atoms And Molecules
  • ISS Crew Wish Tidbinbilla DSN Happy 40th Birthday
  • Study May Expand Applied Benefits Of Super-Hard Ceramics
  • Pilots At Risk For Cosmic Cataracts

  • McKeon Named Chairman Of ThalesRaytheonSystems
  • Orbimage Expands International Sales Force To Meet New Demand
  • Raytheon Names Thomas B. Goslin Jr. Director Of Program Ops, Space Systems
  • L-3 Appointments Fernando Faria As President Of Brashear Business

  • Earth From Space: Lake Kariba, Zambia-Zimbabwe Border
  • The Rather Large Spacecraft That Could
  • Envisat Monitoring China Floods As Part Of Dragon Programme
  • Earth From Space: Unique Arctic Landscape Surveyed By Proba

  • Comtech Receives $30.0 Million For Its Movement Tracking System
  • Galileo Satellite Arrives At ESA-ESTEC For Testing
  • Search And Rescue Unit For Galileo Under Way
  • RFID Chips Promise To Revamp Medicine

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement