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    ESA > Our Activities > Navigation > The future - Galileo

    Galileo IOV launch services contract signed

    16 June 2009

    Yesterday at the Paris Air Show in Le Bourget, ESA and Arianespace signed a contract for the launch of the first four operational Galileo satellites on two Soyuz launch vehicles from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana.

    ESA’s Director of the Galileo Programme and Navigation-related Activities, Mr René Oosterlinck, and the Chairman and CEO of Arianespace, Mr Jean-Yves Le Gall, signed the launch services contract in the presence of Mr Paul Verhoef, Programme Manager of EU Satellite Navigation Programmes at the European Commission. The Galileo In-Orbit Validation (IOV) Launch Services Contract covers the launch of the first four operational Galileo satellites using two Soyuz launch vehicles that will lift off from the Guiana Space Centre (Centre Spatial Guyanais – CSG), Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana.
     
    Following the successful launch of the GIOVE-A and GIOVE-B satellites, the signature of the IOV Launch Services Contract marks an important milestone for the Galileo programme as it progresses towards the operational deployment of the satellites of the Galileo satellite navigation system. The four IOV satellites will be placed in a circular orbit at an altitude of 23 600 km by the end of 2010. Development of the Galileo system is being carried out under a joint ESA/European Union programme.
     
    The launch vehicle chosen to carry the four Galileo IOV satellites into orbit is the Soyuz ST-B with a Fregat MT upper stage, which has been adapted for the deployment needs of the Galileo programme. The Soyuz at CSG Programme is an ESA Programme with co-funding of Arianespace and the European Union.

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    • Related news
      • ESA pavilion "L’Europe de l’Espace, Space for Earth" at the 48th Paris Air Show
        • Galileo: First contracts signed on behalf of the European Commission
        • Related links
        • Galileo website (European Commission)
        • European GNSS Agency
        • Soyuz at CSG
        • Arianespace

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