The third stage of the rocket carrying the MexSat-1 communications
satellite suffered a problem about 500 seconds after launch from the
Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, Russian media quoted Russian
space officials as saying.
Russia's space agency Roscosmos subsequently said in a statement
that the satellite, booster and third stage burnt up almost entirely
in the atmosphere.
Jim Kramer, Vice-President of International Launch Services (ILS),
which launched the rocket, told a news conference that early
indications were that hardware from the launch re-entered Earth's
atmosphere in far east Siberia, but that most of it had probably
disintegrated.
He added that all launches of carrier rockets of this type would now
be suspended pending a Russian state-led investigation.
Mexico's Transport and Communications Minister Gerardo Ruiz Esparza
said that the satellite was insured and that the government would
get its money back in full.
A second Mexican satellite will be launched in October from Cape
Canaveral, Florida, by Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services, a
unit of Lockheed Martin Corp., he added.
The cause of the accident, which happened at a height of 161
kilometers (100.04 miles), was not immediately established.
Russia's workhorse Proton rocket, previously known under its UR-500
code, made its first test flights in the mid-1960s.
It was originally designed as an intercontinental ballistic missile
to carry a nuclear warhead targeting the Soviet Union's Cold War foe
the United States. But it was never deployed as a nuclear weapon.
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TARNISHED IMAGE
Russia's space industry, which pioneered space exploration with the
launch of the first satellite and put the first man into space, has
been haunted by accidents which have tarnished its reputation.
In late April, Russia abandoned a 2.6 billion rouble ($51 million)
mission to supply the International Space Station, (ISS), after an
unmanned Progress M-27M cargo ship, carrying almost 3 tonnes (2,722
kg) of supplies, was unable to dock with the ISS because of
problems.
In July 2013, a Proton carrier rocket carrying three navigation
satellites worth around $200 million crashed shortly after lift-off
from the Russian-leased Baikonur cosmodrome.
Just a few hours before Proton's crash on Saturday, the Progress
M-26M spaceship docked at the ISS failed to ignite its engines and
correct the orbit of the space outpost, Russian media reported.
The lives of the crew are not in danger, they said.
(Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov, additional reporting by Jason Bush
and Christine Murray; Editing by Timothy Heritage and Clelia Oziel)
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