The
rocket is scheduled to take off from the Japan Aerospace
Exploration Agency's (JAXA) Tanegashima Space Centre in southern
Japan at 8:42 a.m. JST (Wednesday 2342 GMT), with a launch
window open until Sept. 15, the company said.
The new schedule was announced a week after the previous launch
attempt, which would have carried Japan's first spacecraft to
land on the moon, was suspended because of high winds.
H-IIA, jointly developed by JAXA and MHI, has been
Japan'sflagship space launch vehicle, with 45 successful
launches in 46tries since 2001. After JAXA's new medium-lift
H3rocket failed on its debut in March, the agency postponed
thelaunch of H-IIA No. 47 for several months to investigate
thecause.
Hoping to help accelerate Japan's aerospace development
initiatives, Japan may subsidize JAXA with about 10 billion yen
($68.4 million) in fiscal 2024, the Yomiuri newspaper reported
on Monday.
JAXA will use this subsidy to pay companies and universities
involved in the development of satellites, rockets, and
lunar-exploration technologies, the report said.
($1 = 146.1300 yen)
(Reporting by Rocky Swift and Mariko Katsumura; Editing by
Christian Schmollinger and Gerry Doyle)
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