Small rockets: Brazil space station ready

The market for small satellite launches is expected to grow and the US is keen to see a quick resolution to technology negotiations with Brazil.

Brazil space station

Brazil's plan to become a new space hub will depend on a technology safeguard agreement with the US. (AAP)

Brazil is ready to launch small commercial rockets from its space base near the equator as soon as it agrees to safeguard US technology that is dominant in the industry, the Brazilian Air Force officer managing the space program says.

Brigadier Major Luiz Fernando Aguiar said Brazil wants to get a piece of the $US300 billion ($A419 billion)-a-year space launch business by drawing US companies interested in launching small satellites at a lower cost from the Alcantara base on its north coast.

"The microsatellite market is most attractive today and we are interested in the 50 to 500-kilo niche," Aguiar told Reuters at the base's main launch pad. "We are developing a rocket for microsatellites. For that this tower is totally ready."

Space cooperation between the United States and Brazil took a big step forward when they signed a Space Situational Awareness (SSA) agreement last month during a visit to Brasilia by US Defence Secretary James Mattis.

The accord on sharing real-time tracking data on objects and debris in space is needed to develop a satellite launching business without the risk of collision.

Boeing Co and Lockheed Martin Corp in December visited the Alcantara space centre, which is especially attractive to smaller firms because its equatorial location cuts fuel costs by a third allowing heavier payloads.

But Brazil's plan to become a new hub in the space industry will depend on concluding a technology safeguard agreement (TSA) with the United States to protect sensitive American space launch and satellite technology, Aguiar said. Without it, no US rocket can blast off from the South American country.

A previous attempt at a US-Brazilian space partnership was scuttled in 2003 when the TSA ran into resistance from the leftist government of former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and was thwarted by Brazilian lawmakers.

The market for small satellite launches is expected to grow fast in the next few years and the US space industry is keen to see new launch capacity in the world and a quick resolution to the negotiation of the TSA with Brazil.


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Source: AAP


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Small rockets: Brazil space station ready | SBS News