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European rocket successfully carries out first commercial mission
European rocket successfully carries out first commercial mission
By Florian Royer with Daniel Lawler in Paris
Kourou (AFP) Mar 6, 2025

Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket successfully carried out its first commercial mission on Thursday, placing a French military satellite into orbit to give the continent a new independent access to space.

After delays including a last-minute postponement on Monday, the heavy-lift rocket blasted off into rainy skies from the Kourou space base in French Guiana.

Around an hour after the launch, the control centre burst into applause as the rocket released the satellite into orbit.

"We could not have dreamed of a better scenario, that was a perfect launch," said David Cavailloles, head of Arianespace, operator of the rocket launcher. "A new era now opens for France's European space programme."

The launch came as Europe seeks to strengthen its defences amid doubts bout cooperation with the United States under new US President Donald Trump.

The launch means that Europe can now independently put large satellites into orbit for the first time since Russia pulled its heavy Soyuz rockets after invading Ukraine in 2022.

Ariane 6 was initially scheduled to enter service in 2020, but repeated delays meant the rocket did not blast off for the first time until July last year.

Its first commercial mission put the French military satellite CSO-3 satellite into orbit at an altitude of around 800 kilometres (500 miles) above Earth.

CSO-3 completes a network of three French military imaging satellites, with the first two launched in 2018 and 2020 on Soyuz rockets.

- 'Europe must ensure its own security' -

European Union countries have 10 military satellites -- five French and five Italian -- compared to "hundreds" for the United States and China, French General Philippe Steininger said. Britain also has its own military communications satellite system.

"Europe must ensure its own security," European Space Agency's space transportation director Toni Tolker-Nielsen said in Kourou this week.

While five Ariane 6 launches are planned this year, Tolker-Nielsen said up to 12 could be carried out a year in the future.

An attempt to launch the mission on Monday was called off just 30 minutes before lift off due to a problem on a fuel pipes, Arianespace said. Other planned launches in December and February were also scrubbed.

Postponed launches are common for new rockets. The latest test flight of the world's biggest rocket, SpaceX's Starship, is also scheduled for launch later Thursday after a last-minute postponement on Monday.

The European space industry has struggled to remain competitive with Elon Musk's SpaceX, which has become increasingly dominant when it comes to launching satellites.

And SpaceX is only expected to become more central to US space efforts now that the billionaire Musk has become a prominent advisor to Trump.

- 'Important step' -

Europe has struggled in space since Ariane 6's predecessor Ariane 5 retired in 2023, Russia pulled its Soyuz rockets and an accident grounded the smaller Vega-C launcher for two years.

But with Vega-C resuming flights in December and Ariane 6's first commercial launch, European space efforts are looking for a boost.

Given the military role of the satellite, heavy security was deployed at the spaceport on the northern coast of South America, with French fighter jets deployed to patrol the surrounding skies.

Arnaud Prost, a French pilot who is also a reserve astronaut for the European Space Agency, said a successful Ariane 6 launch was "an important step for the independence of France and Europe's access to space."

"At the moment, Europe needs to find projects that bring us together," he told AFP.

bur-fro-cho-dl/rlp

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Paris (AFP) Mar 1, 2025
After several postponements, Europe's Ariane 6 launcher will carry out its first commercial mission on Monday when it puts a French military intelligence satellite into space. The launch from the Kourou base in French Guiana is key to Europe's efforts to build up its security autonomy amid the shocks caused by the US-Russia diplomatic rapprochement. "The whole world is watching us," Arianespace chief executive David Cavailloles told AFP this month. Ariane 5 was retired in 2023 and Europe has ... read more

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