Argentina bets on $600 million satellite
to boost agriculture sector
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[September 24, 2018]
By Scott Squires
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentina is
launching a new microwave imaging satellite to monitor natural disasters
and soil moisture, in a long-term bid to bolster the farm sector, an
industry that has historically been the backbone of the country's
economy.
Scheduled to launch on a SpaceX Falcon rocket from Vandenberg Air Force
Base in California on Oct. 6, Argentina's SAOCOM 1a satellite "is going
to boost the high quality precision agriculture Argentina relies on,"
President Mauricio Macri told farmers and industry representatives last
week.
Scientists say the soil and subsurface mapping data provided by the $600
million dollar project should help increase crop yields.
The radar antennae technology will allow Argentina to access a real time
'water map," almost unique in the world, which will allow for prediction
of harvest yields, floods, and droughts, the government said.
Argentina's already-struggling economy has suffered a series of setbacks
since Macri took power, led by a drought that sapped grain exports
earlier this year and a sharp devaluation of its peso currency that
prompted the government to seek a $50 billion standby financing deal
with the International Monetary Fund.
The government announced earlier this month it would institute fiscal
belt-tightening measures, including a tax on the country's primary
exports like corn, wheat, and soy.
"This mission will be incredibly valuable to the country's farmers. We
are hoping that the information will provide a $5 to $7 return on every
dollar invested," said Raul Kulichevsky, Executive and Technical
Director for Argentina's National Space Activities Commission (CONAE).
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A man walks past a scaled-down replica of the SAOCOM 1-A/B satellite
on display at Argentina's space agency CONAE in Buenos Aires,
Argentina September 20, 2018. REUTERS/Marcos Brindicci
While Argentina's previous satellites have relied on optical
surveying, scientists say the SAOCOM mission will provide precision
X-ray and microwave imaging across Argentina's grain-producing
plains, regardless of weather or time of day.
"This technology is novel, and has never before been used in
Argentina. It is the product of 10 years of research," Head
Researcher on the SAOCOM mission, Laura Frulla, said in an
interview.
But the project will not provide much help to Argentina's
cash-strapped economy in the short-term, according to analysts.
"Farmers depend on these satellites to ensure good crop yields, but
given that this won't become operative until June 2019, there is
little it can do to help Argentina's current economic situation,"
said German Heinzenknecht, weather specialist at the Applied Climate
Consultancy.
(Reporting by Scott Squires, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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