The enhanced version of Europe's Ariane 5 rocket will
not be launched until late January to give managers more time to verify its
flight-worthiness, Arianespace Chief Executive Officer Jean-Yves Le Gall said
Nov. 18. The decision clears the way for a Dec. 10 launch of a standard-version
Ariane 5 carrying observation and signals-intelligence satellites for the French
Defense Ministry.
In a briefing with journalists, Le Gall said the
commercial-launch consortium will not take any unnecessary risks with the flight
of the new-version Ariane 5, called Ariane 5 ECA, whose maiden flight ended in
failure in December 2002.
Several technical issues, which he did not specify,
were highlighted as unresolved during a Nov. 17 review of the Ariane 5 ECA's
status, forcing a decision to delay the launch, Le Gall said.
The Evry, France-based company was under pressure
from European governments to launch the Ariane 5 ECA in December ahead of the
standard-version vehicle. He said French defense authorities had exerted no
pressure on the company to place the launch of their Helios 2A optical and
infrared reconnaissance satellite ahead of the Ariane 5 ECA on Arianespace's
launch manifest.
European Space Agency (ESA) governments have paid 555
million euros ($716 million) to rework the rocket's main cryogenic stage, which
caused the December 2002 failure, and to reassess the entire Ariane 5 ECA
design, Le Gall said.
The Ariane 5 ECA is designed to carry two satellites
with a combined weight of up to 10,000 kilograms into geostationary transfer
orbit, the destination of most commercial telecommunications satellites. The
standard-version Ariane 5 can place slightly more than 6,000 kilograms into the
same orbit.
Some European government officials had suggested that
Arianespace would delay the Ariane 5 ECA launch to please the French Defense
Ministry, a valued customer and one paying better-than-commercial
rates.
Le Gall denied that any motives other than technical
were involved. "Arianespace has the most to gain from an early launch of the ECA
version," Le Gall said. "But Arianespace also has the most to lose in the event
of a failed launch. No one would forgive us if we launched before all technical
issues, even the smaller ones, were resolved definitively."
Le Gall also rejected any suggestion that Arianespace
needed to book the French government payload's launch in 2004 to meet its
financial objectives for the year. The French Defense Ministry is paying the
standard rate for its launch, while the Ariane 5 ECA rocket's main passenger --
the Xtar-Eur satellite owned by U.S. and Spanish companies -- is paying
virtually no money up front and only a fraction of the normal launch price
afterward, once its business starts generating sales.
According to Le Gall, the Ariane 5 ECA launch, even
with a non-paying passenger, will generate more revenue for Arianespace than the
French government mission. ESA governments' 555 million-euro investment includes
a payment for the launch.
The company expects to report year-2004 revenues
slightly in excess of 600 million euros, with a small profit, Le Gall
said.
Le Gall said the Vulcain-2 main stage cryogenic
engine that failed in December 2002 has been cleared for launch after a lengthy
redesign and a series of test firings. The remaining technical issues relate to
other aspects of the rocket.
Arianespace would conduct a second wet dress
rehearsal of the Ariane 5 ECA in January. The rehearsal that had been planned
for Nov. 9 was cancelled because of a glitch in ground equipment unrelated to
the launcher or the launch pad, Le Gall said.