Europe 'back in space' despite Ariane 6 debut glitch
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[July 10, 2024]
By Tim Hepher and Joey Roulette
PARIS (Reuters) -Space bosses hailed Europe's return to space after the
Ariane 6 rocket successfully carried out a series of trials in a debut
flight on Tuesday, but the mission ended with the launcher coasting in
orbit without releasing its final batch of payloads.
Watched by a Rafale fighter jet, Europe's newest uncrewed rocket blasted
off from French Guiana around 4 p.m. local time (1900 GMT), restoring
the continent's independent access to space after delays, political
setbacks and debates over funding.
Although not a commercial mission, the flight deployed three sets of
micro-satellites for research purposes, prompting European space
officials to declare the maiden trip a success.
"Europe is back in space," Philippe Baptiste, head of France's CNES
space agency, said via video link to the Paris headquarters of the
European Space Agency (ESA), where employees and politicians cheered the
lift-off.
In a keenly awaited milestone, the Vinci engine powering the rocket's
upper stage was restarted in space for the first time. It is designed to
restart repeatedly, allowing operator Arianespace to place payloads into
several different orbits.
However, a third firing had to be abandoned after a smaller power unit
shut itself down for unspecified reasons, meaning the final batch of
payloads - two small capsules designed to test the conditions for
surviving re-entry - remained stuck onboard.
"We had an anomaly...We are probably not going to finish this part of
the mission as we were hoping to," said Tina Buchner da Costa, an Ariane
6 launch system architect.
The affected auxiliary power unit is a system crucial for the rocket's
ability to put payloads in their intended orbit.
Its failure, although late in the mission, is expected to spur an
engineering investigation.
ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher said the agency was nonetheless on
track to stage a second flight by year-end.
Ariane 6 was developed at an estimated cost of 4 billion euros ($4.33
billion) by ArianeGroup, co-owned by Airbus and Safran. Its first
launch, originally due in 2020, has been repeatedly delayed.
Since the agency retired its workhorse Ariane 5 rocket more than a year
ago, Europe has had no independent means of sending its satellites into
space, while war in Ukraine has cut Western ties to Russian Soyuz
rockets and Italy's Vega C is grounded.
"Ariane 6 is fundamental for Europe's space ambition," Toni Tolker-Nielsen,
ESA's acting director of space transportation, told Reuters from the
control room at Europe's space port.
"It is about sovereign access to space for institutional and
governmental missions ... and this need has been even more emphasized in
view of the geopolitical situation."
SPACE COMPETITION
Europe's temporary isolation in an increasingly global market was
exposed last year when its agencies were forced to switch some payloads
to U.S. rival SpaceX's Falcon 9.
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The logo of the European Space Agency (ESA) is seen during the ESA
Council at Ministerial level (CM22) at the Grand Palais Ephemere in
Paris, France, November 23, 2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo
Ariane 6 owes its existence to a decision by ESA's 22 nations in
2014 to develop a family of rockets in the face of fierce
competition from Elon Musk's private space venture.
The United States and dozens of other countries have come to rely
heavily on Falcon 9 for reaching orbit as everyday life on Earth
becomes increasingly reliant on satellite links and data.
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, part of President Emmanuel
Macron's outgoing centrist and pro-European government that came
third in Sunday's elections, highlighted the Ariane program's role
as a symbol of European unity.
"There are sometimes worries and doubts about Europe's ability to
play in the same league as China and the U.S. - with Ariane we are
proving that through determination and collective will, we can
operate at the same level," he told ESA staff.
Even so, European officials said it will be some time before Ariane
6 pays its way economically after backer nations agreed a fresh
round of financial support last year.
"Ariane 6 is not quite there yet in terms of competitiveness, but
they want to get there," said Ian Annett, former deputy CEO of the
UK Space Agency.
In the latest setback, Europe's weather satellite operator Eumetsat
last month said it would launch its next satellite on a Falcon 9
instead of the initially planned Ariane 6.
The surprise decision angered European officials and broke with
calls to back the local space industry, laying bare tensions that
have simmered over Europe's space ambitions.
ESA has launched an initiative to boost small-launcher projects that
could pave the way for a future private player.
Ariane 6 has 29 missions to launch over the next several years and
aims for up to 12 flights a year.
That includes 18 launches for Amazon's Kuiper internet
constellation.
SpaceX launched Falcon rockets 96 times in 2023 and nearly 70 times
so far in 2024, though most of those were to deploy its in-house
Starlink satellites.
Still, analysts say that has shattered norms and spawned fierce
competition from China, which had 67 launches in 2023.
($1 = 0.9246 euros)
(Reporting by Tim Hepher and Joey Roulette; Editing by Bernadette
Baum and David Evans)
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