Backers Insist Brazilian Spaceport Is Nearing Launch Readiness
Hello
reader!
It
follows a note published on the day (10/04), in the site
"www.spacenews.com", announcing that backers insist that Brazilian
Spaceport is nearing
launch readiness.
Duda Falcão
News from the 6th International Astronautical Conference
| Backers Insist Brazilian
Spaceport Is Nearing Launch
Readiness
By Peter B. de Selding
Oct. 4, 2013
BEIJING — The company created to sell
commercial launch services aboard Ukrainian rockets operated from a Brazilian
equatorial spaceport is seeking to convince skeptics that it is finally nearing
launch readiness.
A decade after it was created by a
Ukrainian-Brazilian bilateral treaty and after the investment of several
hundred million dollars, Alcantara Cyclone Space (ACS) says an inaugural flight
from the Brazilian Alcantara site likely will occur in 2015.
In presentations to a finance audience
in September in Paris and to a technical audience here Sept. 24 at the 64th
International Astronautical Congress, ACS and Ukrainian officials said the
issues that have slowed development are in the past.
Some three-quarters of the development
needed for the Cyclone 4 rocket — using Cyclone 3 and Cyclone 4 first and
second stages and a new upper stage designed by Ukraine’s Yuzhnoye — is
completed, ACS officials said, and 48 percent of the launch site’s construction
has been completed.
But that is the same percentage completion
ACS announced in March. Sergiy Guchenko, ACS’s chief commercial officer, said
development of the launch base has been slowed by property ownership claims by
the indigenous population.
Brazil and Ukraine agreed in October
2003 to develop the Alcantara site using Cyclone 4 after Brazil’s own domestic
rocket development foundered with an August 2003 on-pad explosion.
But the Cyclone 4 project — as
innovative in its way as France’s decision to import Russia’s Soyuz rocket to
Europe’s Guiana Space Center, next door to Alcantara — has always appeared the
result of a political agreement not always appreciated by the Brazilian Space
Agency, AEB.
In a speech here Sept. 23 devoted to
international cooperation and Brazil’s acknowledgment that it could not go it
alone in space development, AEB President Jose Raimundo Braga Coelho did not
mention the Alcantara project.
ACS officials said Brazil’s VLS rocket,
which is still part of the nation’s space strategy, will share the
620-square-kilometer Alcantara launch base with Cyclone 4.
Brazil and Ukraine are dividing equally
the financing of ACS, which under the treaty is supposed to refund the
investment from proceeds of launch service contracts over time. This is not
unlike an agreement Europe’s Arianespace launch consortium struck with the
European Investment Bank for a loan to purchase Russian Soyuz vehicles for use
at the European spaceport.
The loan for Soyuz purchases was
concluded in 2005, and the first Europeanized Soyuz was launched in late 2011.
Soyuz is slowly being integrated into
Arianespace’s operational rhythm and has proved popular with European
governments for Earth observation missions.
Like Arianespace, ACS will have at its
disposal a launch site whose proximity to the equator gives a vehicle born in
the former Soviet Union a much wider launch market offering more capacity to a
given orbit than can be offered from Russia’s high-latitude spaceports.
In addition to its equatorial location,
Alcantara, like Europe’s Guiana Space Center, can launch into polar and
equatorial orbit without overflying land areas.
ACS says a Cyclone 4 launched from
Alcantara can carry a 3,900-kilogram satellite into a sun-synchronous polar
orbit with a 400-kilometer altitude. For payloads heading to equatorial low
Earth orbit, Cyclone 4 can carry nearly 5,700 kilograms.
For a telecommunications satellite
destined for geostationary transfer orbit, Cyclone 4 can handle up to 1,600
kilograms in launch mass, a figure ACS says it hopes to improve over time. The
new upper stage is capped by a 3.65-meter-diameter fairing.
Industry officials, including some who
would compete with ACS, say the evolution of the global commercial satellite
market appears to have turned in ACS’s favor, assuming the company can prove
itself in the next couple of years and keep prices below those offered by the
Europeanized Soyuz and the newer European Vega small-satellite launcher.
Multiple small-satellite initiatives are
finding traction among investors, and almost all of them are concerned that
vehicles in Russia and Ukraine — the German-Russian Rockot, the
Russian-Ukrainian Dnepr, the Russian Soyuz — will not provide sufficient launch
frequency to satisfy the market for piggyback payloads.
The Russian and Ukrainian vehicles
operating now have also sharply increased their prices in recent years.
Despite the market success of the
European Soyuz, European government authorities are already planning
all-European alternatives to support their domestic industry instead of sending
cash to Russia’s Soyuz builders.
Whether Brazil’s VLS rocket development
will be a priority in Brazil’s newly ambitious space program remains unclear.
Source: Website
www.spacenews.com
Comentário: Pois é leitor, está ai mais uma notícia da mídia internacional sobre esse desastroso acordo, matéria esta que nos foi
enviada pelo pesquisador do INPE, o Dr. Mario Eugenio Saturno, ao qual agradecemos publicamente
pela sugestão.
Lendo a notícia a única coisa desastrosa que me parece é o que falam do VLS (que descanse em paz).
ResponderExcluir