A month and
a half before a deadline to respond to a call from Ankara for a critical
surveillance satellite program, scores of local and international manufacturers
have expressed their intention to bid for the contract.
Turkey's
government had earmarked an initial $138 million for the country's space
program and asked local and international manufacturers to respond to a request
for information (RFI), which procurement officials often view as an expression
of intention to bid for the satellite or related equipment and services. But a
procurement official familiar with the program said the eventual cost may
exceed $250 million.
As of July
7, 41 local and foreign manufacturers had responded to the RFI, the deadline
for which is Aug. 26, according to Turkey's defense procurement office, the
Undersecretariat for Defense Industries, or Savunma Sanayi Mustesarligi (SSM).
Foreign
manufacturers obtaining the RFI include Orbital Sciences, Dulles, Va.; Lockheed
Martin, Bethesda, Md.; AeroAstro, Ashburn, Va.; Ball Aerospace &
Technologies, Boulder, Colo.; Alenia Spazio, Rome; Alcatel Space, Paris; Thales
Communications France, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France; EADS Astrium, Toulouse,
France; the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, Tokyo; Israel Aircraft
Industries' MBT Space Division, Lod, Israel; Yuzhnoye State Design Office,
Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine; Russian arms export agency Rosoboronexport, Moscow;
Surrey Satellite Technology, Guildford, England; and Korea Aerospace Research
Institute, Daejun, South Korea.
Potential
local contenders are Tusas Aerospace and Aselsan, Turkey's biggest defense
firm, both in Ankara. German communications giant Siemens' Istanbul-based
corporate entity, Siemens Sanayi ve Ticaret, also is a potential bidder.
The RFI
describes the program in three components:
- The satellite: A very
high-resolution, electro-optical reconnaissance and surveillance imaging
satellite.
- The system: The satellite and
ground systems.
- The project: The system, launch
and early orbit operational services, integrated logistics support,
technological transfer, localization, co-development and co-usage of the
system and other necessary equipment and services.
The program
will be run by the SSM and involves the development of an electro-optical
reconnaissance and surveillance satellite system for the Air Force's
space-based image intelligence architecture, according to the RFI. Here, the
architecture comprises passive and active remote sensing satellite systems,
such as electro-optical and synthetic aperture radar (SAR) gear and ground
systems.
The program
aims to provide a modern, effective means of monitoring the land and coastal
waters surrounding Turkey, and establish a national database and improve
industrial capability in space technology with special emphasis on remote sensing
satellites.
The
respondents are asked to inform the SSM of governmental authorizations/licenses
and warranty issues, and to propose a master time schedule.
An industry
source said that while all of those companies that have obtained the RFI will
probably bid, the genuine competition would be limited to a few manufacturers.
"I would
say ... the real competition will be among the U.S., French, German, Israeli and
Russian contenders," said the source.
A
procurement official familiar with the program said that "the resolution" will
be one of the crucial parameters in gauging bids.
"Although
the RFI mentions a resolution of at least 1 meter, the real threshold is that
of 50 centimeters," he said. "And every inch counts. We want the maximum
available resolution." Resolution refers to the clear detection of ground
objects of a specific size and larger.
Turkey's
original program for a national military satellite had been scrapped in 2001,
when Ankara canceled a contract with Alcatel in response to a French parliamentary
resolution that recognized the deaths in Turkey of hundreds of thousands of
Armenians under Ottoman rule as genocide.
A defense
analyst said the satellite program is of strategic significance, as the Turkish
Armed Forces is gradually changing its "threat concept" toward asymmetrical
threats.
"The
satellite program fits well into the Turkish Armed Forces' emerging threat
perception: terrorism," said a London-based Turkey specialist. "It has gained
importance, especially in the recent wave of terror attacks in Turkey and
abroad."