U.S. space companies aim to help Brazil
rocket base lift off
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[March 10, 2018]
By Anthony Boadle
BRASILIA (Reuters) - U.S. companies eager
to tap into the fast-growing market for low-cost satellite launches
could become the first customers when Brazil's Alcantara space center
near the equator opens as a commercial spaceport, executives and
Brazilian officials said.
Aerospace titans Boeing Co and Lockheed Martin Corp in December visited
the Alcantara space center, but the Brazilian space agency's launch site
is especially attractive to smaller firms because its equatorial
location cuts fuel costs by a third.
Still, Brazil's aim of becoming a hot new hub in the space industry will
depend on negotiating a technology safeguards agreement (TSA) with the
United States to protect sensitive American space launch and satellite
technology. Without it, no U.S. rocket can blast off from the South
American country.
Brazil wants to attract customers by marketing itself as the cheaper
alternative to Kourou, the European spaceport in neighboring French
Guiana, which mostly launches big satellites. Brazilian officials are
hoping to complete a U.S. TSA this year that would facilitate the
opening of the commercial spaceport.
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On Feb. 22, U.S. and Brazilian government representatives, along with
space companies from both countries, held a conference call with a White
House official who was asked whether the Trump administration would
agree to a TSA with Brazil, according to a person on the call.
"We are encouraged that Brazilian officials have expressed an interest
in working more closely with the United States in the space sector," a
spokeswoman for the White House National Security Council said. She gave
no further details.
The safeguard accord could be ready this year if the U.S. State
Department gets negotiating permission, according to industry
representatives.
Tucson, Arizona-based Vector Launch Inc, which specializes in small
rockets, appears eager to launch from the Brazilian site. The company
wants to undercut big payload specialists like billionaire entrepreneur
Elon Musk's SpaceX by launching so-called microsatellites from small
rockets, cutting costs and wait time for clients.
"Our vision is to launch hundreds of Vector rockets into orbit to
satisfy the growing market for microsatellites," said Vector Vice
President Alex Rodriguez, who made a December visit to Alcantara
coordinated by Boeing.
"We are closer to the equator and have an excellent site for launching
microsatellites," said Brigadier Luiz Fernando Aguiar, coordinator of
the Brazilian Air Force's space program, comparing the Alcantara site
with Kourou.
Alcantara has radars, a runway and a seaport to unload equipment, along
with plenty of open land to store rockets and build a liquid oxygen
plant if needed, he said.
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Brazilian soldiers look on as technicians inspect the damage of
what's left of the Alcantara launch pad, on Brazil's Amazon jungle
coast, August 25, 2003. REUTERS/Agencia Brasil/File photo
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A previous attempt at a U.S.-Brazilian space partnership was scuttled in
2003 when the technology safeguards agreement faced resistance from the
leftist government of former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and was
thwarted by Brazilian lawmakers. The new effort is expected to pass
easily in a more conservative Brazilian Congress.
FAST-GROWING NICHE
While the market for launches of large geosynchronous satellites has
solidified, the Space Enterprise Council, which represents U.S.
industry from launch services to satellite manufacturers, has said
the expanding microsatellite sector could experience up to 600
launches for satellites under 110 pounds (50 kg) between now and
2022.
Alcantara could capture 25 percent of that market, according to the
council, which has said a U.S.-Brazilian partnership would give both
countries an edge in the fast-growing segment.
The cost of microsatellites is a fraction of larger satellites
options, making them increasingly important for GPS navigation,
Earth imagery, surveillance and internet communications.
Boeing, which chairs the Space Enterprise Council, is in talks to
partner with Brazil's Embraer SA, the world's third-largest
commercial planemaker and the main player in the Brazilian aerospace
industry.
SpaceX was not represented on the visit to Alcantara and is not a
member of the council, which also includes Lockheed Martin, Northrop
Grumman Corp and Viasat Inc.
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After Brazilian officials last month said SpaceX was on the trip,
the company said that was incorrect and that it was not interested
in launching from Brazil.
Viasat last month entered the satellite broadband businesses in
Brazil with an agreement to use capacity on the country's 5-tonne
SGDC-1 geostationary satellite launched last year from Kourou and
operated by state-run telecom company Telebras.
Brazil abandoned plans to build its own rocket to put large
satellites in orbit after an explosion and fire in 2003 at Alcantara
killed 21 people.
The country is developing a smaller rocket for microsatellites that
will be launched from Alcantara next year, boosted by engines
developed by the German Aerospace Center.
(Reporting by Anthony Boadle; Editing by Will Dunham and Tom Brown)
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