What's new

India will launch Canadian satellite amid tension with Russia

StormShadow

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Jan 10, 2011
Messages
3,485
Reaction score
-10
829d6025f658bbe889240527c4f87cdc.jpg



Indians watch the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C23) rocket lifting off from the east coast island of Sriharikota, India, this past June. Canada's M3M satellite is scheduled to be launched on the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle next spring. (Arun Sankar K./Associated Press)

The launch of a Canadian satellite, postponed amid tensions in the Ukraine, is finally scheduled for liftoff — one year behind schedule.

The M3M communications satellite, which was originally to be launched aboard a Russian rocket, will instead blast into orbit from India next July.

The announcement that a deal has been signed with India was made at the International Astronautical Congress in Toronto, a few days after Canada refused to allow Russian delegates to attend the prestigious symposium which opened on Monday.

The exclusion angered Moscow, which said it flew in the face of international space co-operation. The Russians said it amounts to politicizing space exploration over the conflict in Ukraine, where fighting has raged since Russian troops moved on the Crimea in March.

Canada also denied visas to some Chinese delegates.

COM DEV International Ltd., based in Cambridge, Ont., reached a deal with Antrix Corp., the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organization, to launch the satellite.

The Canadian Space Agency says on its website the M3M was built to meet the needs of the Department of National Defence and ensure Canada's sovereignty.

It was to be launched with a Russian Soyuz rocket in July, but the federal government decided in April not to proceed.

"This was a Canadian government decision based, I would argue, on the political situation that existed," Michael Pley, the CEO of COM DEV, said Thursday. "Clearly there's a link to what's been happening in the Ukraine."

He said the satellite will now be launched on India's Polar Satellite launch vehicle.

"We're thinking that it's late in our third quarter of 2015, so around the July time frame," Pley said in an interview from Toronto.

"We're really excited because this is a good reliable launcher and we were initially worried the delay would take a lot longer and so we're really pleased that the Canadian Space Agency in particular worked really hard and closely with us to find this launch and actually secure it quickly," he said.

Canadian government will pay

Pley said the Canadian government would be paying for the new launch, although he did not disclose any figure.

"We're not anticipating any compensation at all except for the payment in setting up for a new launch," he said. "Our primary concern was to do that."

Pley added that the federal government, which he described as a "good anchor customer," recently expanded a contract it had with COM DEV to provide Earth data services.

COM DEV was selected to built the satellite under a government contract worth $21 million.

M3M stands for Maritime Monitoring and Messaging Micro-Satellite. The Canadian Space Agency says on its website that the satellite, which is as big as a medium-sized moving box, will be used to manage marine transport in Canadian waters.

India will launch Canadian satellite amid tension with Russia - Technology & Science - CBC News
 
. . . . .
and people were saying that we are wasting money on Mangalyaan......Great country need great vision.....and action
 
.
COM DEV was selected to built the satellite under a government contract worth $21 million:woot:.
Ye satellite banane ka contract bhi hadap lete to maja aa jata:cheesy:.
 
. .
Just waiting for our own engines. Antrix will be bringing huge money...
 
. . . .
I feel bad for Russia. Im sure I dont know the whole story but for the West to think it can conveniently over take Ukraine, which was in the Russian sphere of influence is ridiculous. I understand energy is the main issue but to even think that Russia would allow for their Black Sea to be compromised is ludricious.

but you are stealing the business from the one who taught you the business.



Really? So we should feel moral guilt huh? What about China?
 
.
but you are stealing the business from the one who taught you the business.

That is just sour grapes. PSLV is entirely indegenous. They dont even have similar components or configuration to Russian launchers.

I feel bad for Russia. Im sure I dont know the whole story but for the West to think it can conveniently over take Ukraine, which was in the Russian sphere of influence is ridiculous. I understand energy is the main issue but to even think that Russia would allow for their Black Sea to be compromised is ludricious.

Really? So we should feel moral guilt huh? What about China?

We all do. NATO and EUs creeping move east should certainly ring alarm bells in Moscow.
As for China or their chamchas feeling any guilt is a non concept. Chinese satelites were made by the Soviet Union and launched by soviet launchers in the early years. You can see the Soviet pedigree in their rocket designs
 
Last edited:
.
Back
Top Bottom