Guiana Space Centre Explained

Agency Name:Guiana Space Centre
Nativename:French: Centre spatial guyanais
Picture Caption:Panoramic view of Guiana Space Centre
Jurisdiction:Government of France
Headquarters:Kourou, French Guiana
Employees:1,700 direct (2020)
7,500 indirect (2011)
Chief1 Name:Philippe Lier
Chief1 Position:Director
Parent Agency:ESA / EUSPA / CNES
Map:Plan Centre Spatial Guyanais-en.svg
Map Width:250px
Guiana Space Centre
Tlaunches:321
Coordinates:5.169°N -52.6903°W
Pads:7
Paddetails:
Designation:ALFS
Status:Inactive
Launches:412
First Launch:1968
Last Launch:1981
Designation:ALD
Status:Inactive
Launches:8
First Launch:10 March 1970
First Details:Diamant B (Mika / Wika)
Last Launch:27 September 1975
Last Details:Diamant BP4 (Aura)
Status:Active
Launches:49
First Launch:5 November 1971
First Details:Europa II (STV 4)
Last Launch:9 October 2023
Last Details:Vega (THEOS-2)
Status:Inactive
Launches:119
First Launch:28 March 1986
First Details:Ariane 3 (GStar-2)
Last Launch:15 February 2003
Last Details:Ariane 4 (Intelsat 907)
Status:Inactive
Launches:117
First Launch:4 June 1996
First Details:Ariane 5 (Cluster)
Last Launch:5 July 2023
Last Details:Ariane 5 (Syracuse 4B / Heinrich Hertz)
Status:Inactive
Launches:27
First Launch:21 October 2011
First Details:Soyuz ST-B (Galileo)
Last Launch:10 February 2022
Last Details:Soyuz ST-B (OneWeb L13)
Status:Active
Launches:1
First Launch:9 July 2024
First Details:Ariane 6 (multiple payloads)
Status:Active
First:10 March 1970

The Guiana Space Centre (French: links=no|Centre spatial guyanais; CSG), also called Europe's Spaceport,[1] [2] is a spaceport to the northwest of Kourou in French Guiana, a overseas region of France in South America. Kourou is located approximately 500km (300miles) north of the equator at a latitude of 5°. In operation since 1968, it is a suitable location for a spaceport because of its near equatorial location and open sea to the east and north.

At CSG, space launches are conducted by several European private companies and government agencies working together. The CSG land itself is managed by CNES, the French national space agency. The launch infrastructure built on the CSG land is owned by the European Space Agency. The private company Arianespace operates the launches including planning missions, handing customer relationships and overseeing the team at CSG at that integrates and prepares vehicles for launch. The rockets themselves are designed and produced by other companies, ArianeGroup for the Ariane 6 and Avio for the Vega.

History

In 1964, Guiana was selected to become the spaceport of France, replacing France's first launch site Centre interarmées d'essais d'engins spéciaux in Hammaguir, Algeria.[3] In 1975, France offered to share Kourou with the ESA, with ESA covering today two thirds of Guiana Space Centre's budget.[4] [5] Commercial launches are also bought by non-European companies. ESA pays two-thirds of the spaceport's annual budget and has also financed the upgrades made during the development of the Ariane launchers.

On 4 April 2017, the center was occupied by 30 labour unions and indigenous peoples leaders in the midst of the 2017 social unrest in French Guiana. The center resumed operation on 24 April 2017, after an emergency relief plan of up to 2.1 billion euros was authorized by the French government.[6] [7]

Facilities

The location of the space centre was selected based on various factors. One of the primary benefits of this spaceport is its proximity to the equator, which makes it more efficient, requiring substantially less energy, to launch spacecraft into an near-equatorial, geostationary orbit compared to launching from spaceports at higher latitudes.

Additionally, the centre's location adjacent to the open sea to the east reduces the potential risk of rocket stages and debris from launch failures falling on or near human settlements, which enhances safety during spaceflight activities.

Furthermore, rockets typically launch towards the east to take advantage of Earth's rotation and the angular momentum it provides. The near-equatorial location of the Guiana Space Centre offers an advantage for launches to low-inclination or geostationary Earth orbits, as rockets can be launched into orbits with an inclination of as low as 6°. In contrast, a rocket launched from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, with a latitude of 28.5°, can only be launched to an inclination of 28.5°, requiring a significant amount of propellant to change the inclination.

The location of the Guiana Space Centre provides benefits for launching spacecraft into low-inclination or geostationary Earth orbits. Rockets of similar size to those used at other spaceports to place satellites into geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), such as the Proton and Ariane 5 rockets, can send similar payloads to a low Earth orbit (LEO). For example, the Proton rocket, launched from high latitudes in Russia, can only send 6,270kg to GTO, while the Kourou-launched Ariane 5 can send more than 10,000kg to GTO.[8] [9]

BEC/ELA-1/ELV

See main article: ELA-1.

Originally built in the 1960s under the name of Base Équatoriale du CECLES (English: [[European Launcher Development Organisation|ELDO]] Equatorial Base), the pad located at 5.236°N -52.775°W was designed for the Europa-II launch vehicle. One Europa-II was launched from the site in 1971, which ended in failure due to a guidance problem, before the program was cancelled.[10]

The pad at Giunana was demolished and subsequently rebuilt as the first launch complex for Ariane as ELA . Redesignated later as ELA-1, it was used for Ariane 1 and Ariane 2 and 3 launches until being retired in 1989.[11]

In November 2001, it was refurbished again for the Vega rocket and renamed ELV . The first launch was on 13 February 2012.[12]

ELA-2

The ELA-2 pad, located at 5.232°N -52.776°W, built in 1986, had been used for Ariane 4 launches from 1988 until 2003. Before 1988, although purpose-built for Ariane 4, the pad hosted an Ariane-2 and two Ariane-3 launches. The complex consisted of two areas: the launcher preparation zone and the launch pad, separated by one kilometre, allowing a launcher to be assembled in the preparation zone while another launch from the pad. A mobile service tower at the launch pad provided a protected environment for payload installation and final preparation of the rocket.[13] Following the retirement of the Ariane 4 in favor of the Ariane 5, In September 2011, the pad's service tower was demolished using explosives.[14]

ELA-3

See main article: ELA-3.

ELA-3 was active between 4 June 1996 and 5 July 2023, launching the Ariane 5. This facility is located at 5.239°N -52.768°W and covers an area of .[15]

ELA-4

See main article: ELA-4.

ELA4 is located along the Route de l'Espace in the Roche Christine site at 5.2626°N -52.7907°W, between ELA-3 and ELS launch facilities. CNES was responsible for the construction of the Ariane 6 ground segments including the new launch pad. Earthworks on the 150 hectare launch site began at the end of June 2015 and was completed at the start of 2016. Four platforms were levelled to accommodate the launch pad, the liquid oxygen and hydrogen tanks and the assembly building. Civil engineering works on the flame trench and other buildings began in the summer of 2016 and ended in 2019.[16] [17] The new launch facility was inaugurated on 28 September 2021 with first flight of the Ariane 6 conducted on 9 July 2024.[18]

ELS / Soyuz at CSG

See main article: Ensemble de Lancement Soyouz and Soyuz at the Guiana Space Centre.

ESA has built ELS at 5.305°N -52.834°W for launching Russian-built Soyuz-2 rockets. The first Soyuz launch from ELS was postponed several times, but launched on 21 October 2011.[19]

ELS is located on the territory of Sinnamary commune, from Kourou harbor.[20] It is northwest of the site used for the Ariane 5 launches. Under the terms of the Russo-European joint venture, ESA will augment its own launch vehicle fleet with Soyuz rockets – using them to launch ESA or commercial payloads – and the Russians will get access to the Kourou spaceport for launching their own payloads with Soyuz rockets. Russia will use the Guiana Space Centre in addition to Baikonur Cosmodrome. The Guiana location has the significant benefit of greatly increased payload capability, owing to the near equatorial position. A Soyuz rocket with a 1.7 tones to geostationary transfer orbit performance from Baikonur will increase its payload potential to 2.8 tones from the Guiana launch site.[21]

The ELS project is being co-funded by Arianespace, ESA, and the European Union, with CNES being the prime contractor. The project has a projected cost of approximately €320 million, where €120 million are allocated for modernizing the Soyuz vehicle.[22] The official opening of the launch site construction occurred on 27 February 2007.

On 13 September 2010, Spaceflight Now reported that after several delays in the construction of a mobile gantry the launch pad had been finished, and the first flight of the Soyuz was expected to occur in early 2011.[23] By October 2010, 18 launch contracts were signed. Arianespace has ordered 24 launchers from Russian industry.[24]

On 21 October 2011, two Galileo IOV-1 and IOV-2 satellites were launched using a Soyuz-ST rocket, in the "first Russian Soyuz vehicle ever launched from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana.".[25]

On 26 February 2022, Roscosmos announced that it was suspending operations at ELS as a reaction to international sanctions during the Russo-Ukrainian War.[26] According to Stephane Israël, CEO of Arianespace, "there will no longer be Soyuz launches" from the Guiana Space Center.[27]

Final assembly building

Astrium assembles each Ariane 5 launcher in the Launcher Integration Building. The vehicle is then delivered to the Final Assembly Building for payload integration by Arianespace.[28] The Final Assembly Building is located from the ELA-3 launch zone. The mobile launch table completes the trip with an Ariane 5 in about one hour. It is then secured in place over the launch pad's flame ducts.[29]

Launches

Launch safety

Fire safety is ensured by a detachment of the Paris Fire Brigade, a branch of the French Army. Security around the base is ensured by French Gendarmerie forces, assisted by the 3rd Foreign Infantry Regiment of the French Foreign Legion. Before and during launch windows, CSG facility security is significantly enhanced by anti-personnel and anti-aircraft measures, the exact configurations of which are classified by the French military. All entrants to the launch complex are also subject to checks for proof of permission to enter the facility.

The Guiana Space Centre (as per CNES) also contains the Îles du Salut, a former penal colony including the infamous Devil's Island. Now a tourist site, the islands are under the launching trajectory for geosynchronous orbit and have to be evacuated during launches.

Early launches

Recent launches

Launch statistics

, Kourou counts amongst the spaceports with the highest percentage of successful launches, both successive and overall. Here is a chronology of all orbital launches from the Kourou spaceport since 1970, under the French and European space programmes.

Flights by launcher

Active:
Retired:

Flights by mission outcome

      

Local impact

The space sector was responsible for about 15% of French Guiana's GDP in 2014, around half of the 28% it was in 1990. This reduction is mostly due to expansion in other sectors, rather than decreasing space activity. As of 2020, the space sector employed 4,620 people in Guiana, meaning the industry was responsible for just under 10% of salaried jobs in the overseas department,[46] though there are estimates that as many as 9,000 people are employed directly and indirectly as a result of activities at the spaceport.[47] The Guiana Space Centre (or CSG) is one of the spaceports in the world that receives the most traffic, and it receives large amounts of funding from the European Space Agency (ESA), with the organisation covering around 66% of the spaceport's annual budget, as well as financing new facilities.[48] Indigenous and local activist groups argue that mainland France is only interested in French Guiana as far as the space centre is concerned, and the funding that the space centre receives is symbolic given the inequity in living standards seen between the department and mainland France.[49] [50] For example, despite there being high poverty levels and unemployment rates of over 20% in the department, the cost of living remains high due to a dependence on mainland France for imported food and resources, yet large amounts of funding are invested in the space programme, rather than in public services for the department.[51]

The department became the site of strikes and protests throughout March and April 2017, which were held to highlight the insecurity and infrastructural issues facing French Guiana. Alongside 30 labour unions who launched strikes, the Collective of 500 Brothers led protests in Kourou, which spread across the entire country, and resonated in mainland France.[52] [53] On 21 March 2017, the launch of an Ariane 5 rocket carrying a Brazilian satellite and a South Korean satellite was prevented due to protesters and workers on strike from the CSG blockading the centre.[54] Further strikes and occupation of the space centre meant that the satellites were not launched until May 2017.[55] Negotiations between the French government and Guianese protesters resulted in a rejection of a €1.1 billion offer made by the French, with the Guianese demanding at least €3 billion in aid. Since the protests, CNES (National Centre for Space Studies), the French government space agency that operates the spaceport, added an additional €10 million to the €40 million it had already pledged to fund economic and social programmes in French Guiana.

Colonialism

Particularly regarding the colonial history the site has been identified as carrying a heritage of colonialism and imperialism into space.[56] [57]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Europe's Spaceport. 2021-01-13. ESA.int .
  2. Web site: 23 April 2015. CNES FACILITIES. CNES.fr .
  3. Gorman . Alice . The Archaeology of Space Exploration . The Sociological Review . SAGE Publications . 57 . 1_suppl . 2009 . 0038-0261 . 10.1111/j.1467-954x.2009.01821.x . 132–145. 142643666 .
  4. http://www.cnes-csg.fr/web/CNES-CSG-fr/9777-implantation.php "Installation of the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana"
  5. http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Launchers_Europe_s_Spaceport/index.html "Europe's Spaceport"
  6. News: Guyane : le Centre spatial guyanais occupé par des manifestants. La Croix. 5 April 2017. 5 April 2017. French.
  7. Web site: 2017-04-23 . French Guiana protests end with agreement - France 24 . 2024-05-24 . web.archive.org . 23 April 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170423140602/http://www.france24.com/en/20170422-french-guiana-protests-end-with-agreement-promise-aid . bot: unknown .
  8. News: Ariane 5 - Arianespace. Arianespace. 2017-08-23.
  9. Web site: Commercial Launch Vehicle ILS Proton Breeze M International Launch Services. ilslaunch.com. 2017-08-23.
  10. Web site: EUROPA II (1971) . . 21 August 2019 . 2021-03-05.
  11. Web site: Pad List - World Launch Sites. Space Launch Report . https://web.archive.org/web/20091022053015/http://geocities.com/launchreport/padsites.html. 2009-10-22. dead.
  12. Web site: Vega Liftoff . ESA.int . 2012-02-13 . 2013-09-12 . 12 March 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130312064618/http://www.esa.int/Our_Activities/Launchers/Launch_vehicles/Vega3/Vega_liftoff . dead .
  13. Web site: Guiana Space Center - Site advantages . . 2021-03-05.
  14. Web site: The Spaceport's ELA-2 launch facility is dismantled after an illustrious career . 26 September 2011 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20190630104439/https://www.arianespace.com/corporate-news/the-spaceports-ela-2-launch-facility-is-dismantled-after-an-illustrious-career/ . 30 June 2019.
  15. Web site: Europe's spaceport. ESA.
  16. Web site: The Ariane 6 system: On board-ground interfaces and launch facility . 2015-11-04 . CNES . French . 2021-11-09.
  17. Web site: Ariane 6 . 2021-11-05 . ESA . 2021-11-09.
  18. Web site: ELA-4 launch complex inaugurated at Guiana Space Centre . 2021-09-28 . CNES . 2021-11-09.
  19. http://spaceflightnow.com/soyuz/vs01/status.html SpaceflightNow's VS01 flight status page
  20. Book: Space Exploration 2007. 138 . Springer Science & Business Media. 978-0-387-48758-8. Harvey, Brian. 10 August 2007.
  21. Le Port Spatial de l'Europe (CNES)
  22. Web site: Europe To Pay Russia To Build Soyuz Pad At Kourou: Russia. SpaceDaily.
  23. Web site: Soyuz, Vega flights from French Guiana set for 2011.
  24. Arianespace hosts meeting of launch system manufacturers . 11 October 2010. Evry.
  25. News: Messier. Doug. Soyuz Launches From Kourou for First Time. 24 October 2011. Parabolic Arc. 22 October 2011. 25 October 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111025052132/http://www.parabolicarc.com/2011/10/22/soyuz-launches-from-kourou-for-first-time/. dead.
  26. Web site: Russia halts Soyuz launches from French Guiana. 26 February 2022.
  27. Web site: "Il n'y aura pas de prochain lancement Soyouz depuis le Centre Spatial Guyanais" . 2023-01-08 . Guyane la 1ère . fr-FR.
  28. Web site: Arianespace receives its fifth Ariane 5 of 2008. 28 July 2008. Arianespace. January 12, 2023.
  29. Web site: Ariane 5 rolls out for Arianespace's fifth launch of 2007. Arianespace. 8 November 2007. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20080125070534/http://www.arianespace.com/site/news/mission_up_438.html. 25 January 2008.
  30. Web site: DIAL/MIKA - NSSDC ID: 1970-017B. NASA NSSDC.
  31. Web site: DIAL/WIKA - NSSDC ID: 1970-017A. NASA NSSDC.
  32. Web site: Rosenberg. Zach. First Soyuz launch from French Guiana. FlightGlobal. 11 August 2014.
  33. Web site: Arianespace VSO2 mission: Soyuz STA orbits Pleiades 1A, ELISA and SSOT. Arianespace. 11 August 2014.
  34. Web site: Successful lift-off for Vega rocket. News24.
  35. Web site: Follow Ariane launch live. Centre National d'Études Spatiales. 23 April 2015. CNES.
  36. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-23894646 India launches first defence satellite GSAT-7
  37. http://m.thehindu.com/news/national/navys-first-satellite-gsat7-now-in-space/article5074800.ece/ Navy's first satellite GSAT-7 now in the Space
  38. Web site: BepiColombo Spacecraft Launch on 7-Year Trek to Mercury for Europe and Japan. space.com. 20 October 2018. 2018-10-20.
  39. Web site: Ariane 5 launches Mission Extension Vehicle, two communications satellites to orbit. 2020-08-14. 2020-08-17.
  40. Web site: Malik . Tariq . 2020-11-17 . European Vega rocket suffers major launch failure, satellites for Spain and France lost . 2023-07-06 . Space.com . en.
  41. Web site: Launch Countdown Webb/NASA.
  42. Web site: MTG-I1 Liftoff.
  43. Web site: Wall . Mike . 2022-12-21 . Europe's Vega C rocket fails on 2nd-ever mission, 2 satellites lost . 2023-07-06 . Space.com . en.
  44. Web site: Davenport . Justin . ESA launches JUICE to Jupiter’s icy moons atop Ariane 5 . 14 April 2023 . 14 April 2023 . NASASpaceFlight.
  45. Web site: Dinner . Josh . 2023-07-05 . Farewell, Ariane 5! Europe's workhorse rocket launches 2 satellites on final mission (video) . 2023-07-06 . Space.com . en.
  46. Web site: Rapport Annuel Économoque Guyane 2020 . 16 March 2022.
  47. Web site: Henry . Caleb . French space agency pledges 10-million-euro boost to French Guiana economy . Space News . 27 July 2018 . 15 March 2022.
  48. Web site: European Space Agency . Europe's Spaceport . ESA . 16 March 2022.
  49. News: Guyana: Protesters left the Guiana Space Center . La Croix . 5 April 2017 . 16 March 2022.
  50. Web site: D'Auria . Peter . How a handful of South American protestors took Europe's space program hostage . Quartz . 17 April 2017 . 16 March 2022.
  51. Web site: MacDonald . Scott . Has anything changed since French Guiana's 2017 social upheaval? . Global Americans . 20 April 2021 . 15 March 2022 . 2 August 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220802042220/https://theglobalamericans.org/2021/04/has-anything-changed-since-french-guianas-2017-social-upheaval/ . dead .
  52. Web site: French Guiana paralysed by general strike . AlJazeera . 16 March 2022.
  53. News: Breeden . Aurelien . Strikes Shut Down French Guiana, With Effects Resonating in Paris . New York Times . 27 March 2017 . 16 March 2022.
  54. News: Spaceport protest delays rocket launch in French Guiana . BBC News . 21 March 2017 . 15 March 2022.
  55. Web site: Strike-delayed European rocket launches in French Guiana . Phys Org . 16 March 2022.
  56. Redfield . Peter . The Half-Life of Empire in Outer Space . Social Studies of Science . 32 . 5-6 . 2002 . 0306-3127 . 10.1177/030631270203200508 . 791–825.
  57. Korpershoek . Karlijn . Accessibility to Space Infrastructures and Outer Space: Anthropological Insights from Europe’s Spaceport . International Journal of the Commons . 17 . 1 . December 26, 2023 . 1875-0281 . 10.5334/ijc.1284 . free . 481–491.