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Flexibility and resiliency define Arianespace's performance in 2020 by Staff Writers Evry, France (SPX) Jan 11, 2021
Building on a year that confirmed Arianespace's unique capability to offer launch service solutions tailored for its customers' varied requirements, the company is well prepared for the future with its family of launchers and the capacity of three spaceports. CEO Stephane Israel said Arianespace continues to demonstrate its flexibility in responding to both commercial and institutional markets, using the Ariane 5, Soyuz and Vega launch vehicles today - to be supplemented by future introductions of the next-generation Vega C and Ariane 6. Speaking during the company's traditional New Year's press conference this week, Israel noted that Arianespace's 10 missions in 2020 were performed to three primary Earth orbits: geostationary transfer orbit, Sun-synchronous orbit and low-Earth orbit. "During a challenging year, we perfectly demonstrated our resilience and a high level of activity, which enables us to actively prepare for the future," he told journalists during the press conference, held online to respect COVID-19 social distancing. Reviewing Arianespace's key achievements in 2020
The company lofted 70 percent of the commercial geostationary satellites that were orbited last year by all launch service providers, including the first mission performed by Ariane 5 with a triple payload of primary satellites. For the small satellite segment, the Small Spacecraft Mission Service's (SSMS) proof-of-concept flight with Vega last year placed more than 50 micro- and nano-satellites in orbit; while Arianespace served the institutional market with its year-ending launch that orbited France's CSO-2 spacecraft for defense/security applications. "Our activity brings the forecasted turnover in 2020 to around 1 billion euros, allowing us to reach a balanced financial situation - which is very good news," Israel said during the on-line press conference. The company's order book has a value of more than euro 3.2 billion with 60 percent of the orders from commercial customers and 40 percent institutional. This amount (which does not include institutional pre-reservations received in 2020) is equivalent to three years of business.
Milestone missions are on the horizon Another landmark mission in 2021 will be Ariane 5's launch of the James Webb Space Telescope for the U.S. NASA space agency, in partnership with the European Space Agency (ESA). With this flight scheduled for late October, Israel said the spacecraft's support equipment will begin arriving six months before liftoff, followed by the large telescope payload traveling by ship from Florida and arriving in French Guiana eight weeks prior to launch.
Loss of Vega flight VV17: Independent Enquiry Commission announces conclusions Paris (ESA) Dec 18, 2020 Initial investigations, conducted right after the launch with the available data, identified a problem related to the integration of the fourth-stage AVUM Thrust Vector Control (TVC) system as being the most likely cause of the loss of control of the launcher. Arianespace (the launch service provider) and the European Space Agency (ESA - the launch system development authority) immediately set up an Independent Enquiry Commission (IEC). The Commission provided the detailed report and conclusions c ... read more
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