August 25, 2010

Arianespace and India

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On the occasion of this week’s World Space-Biz international conference in Bangalore, India, Arianespace reaffirms its position as the benchmark commercial launch services provider for the world’s leading satellite manufacturers and operators.

30 years of success

Since its founding in March 1980, Arianespace has signed more than 300 launch service & solutions contracts, and has launched 283 satellites for 77 customers –accounting for more than half of all commercial satellites now in service.

In the coming months, the heavy-lift Ariane 5 launcher will be joined at the Guiana Space Center by the Soyuz medium launch vehicle and the Vega lightweight launcher. As a result, Arianespace will have a complete family of launchers, capable of launching all types of satellites for all customers.

Pace-setting technical performance

With 38 successful launches in a row over the last seven years, Ariane 5 has largely proven its technical maturity and operational capabilities. Arianespace set a new record for Ariane 5 in 2009, with seven launches during the calendar year that orbited nine commercial satellites and three European government payloads.

Arianespace will maintain this pace in 2010. Since the beginning of the year, three Ariane 5 launchers have successfully orbited six payloads: ASTRA 3B and COMSATBw-2, ARABSAT-5A and COMS, and NILESAT 201 and RASCOM-QAF1R.

Before the end of the year, three more Ariane 5 launches are slated, with one of them to orbit the HYLAS-1 payload, developed by Astrium. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is responsible for the satellite’s platform and integration.

Record backlog

Capitalizing on its range of launchers, Arianespace has won more than half of the commercial launch contracts open to competition worldwide in the past two years. This gives it a very healthy backlog, with contracts from 27 customers.

Since the beginning of 2010, Arianespace has signed nine contracts for the launch of geostationary satellites by Ariane 5, and five contracts to orbit the first 10 satellites in the Galileo constellation, using Soyuz.

Arianespace now has the largest backlog in the industry, with 32 satellites to be placed in geostationary transfer orbit using Ariane 5, along with six launches by Ariane 5 for the ATV cargo vessel to service the International Space Station and 17 launches of Soyuz.

 Arianespace and India

India is already one of Arianespace’s leading partners, and will remain so for many years to come – given the breadth and depth of India’s space program.

Starting with the Apple experimental satellite, which was launched in 1981, on Ariane’s third mission, Arianespace has orbited 13 Indian satellites to date and, in the coming months, Arianespace will loft two other ISRO payloads: INSAT 4G (GSAT-8) and GSAT-10, which will be the 15th ISRO satellite to use the European launcher.

At the same time, Arianespace and ISRO have developed very close ties, through the launch services via joint contract proposals for the Ariane 5 and GSLV launchers.

About Arianespace

Arianespace is the world’s leading launch service & solutions company, providing innovation to its customers since 1980. Backed by 24 shareholders and the European Space Agency, Arianespace offers an unrivalled family of launchers, comprising Ariane 5, Soyuz and Vega, and an international workforce renowned for a culture of commitment and excellence. As of August 25 2010, Arianespace had launched a total of 283 payloads, including more than half of all the commercial satellites now in service worldwide. It has a backlog of 22 Ariane 5 and 17 Soyuz launches, equal to more than three years of business.

Arianespace et l’Inde
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