DARMSTADT, Germany โ Europe and Russia will sign a broad launcher-cooperation agreement Jan. 19 covering the use of Russiaโs Soyuz rocket by Europe and a long-term agreement on co-development of future launch vehicles, European Space Agency (ESA) Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said.
The accord, to be signed in Moscow, should help ease concerns in Europe that a promised Euro-Russian future-launcher program was not taking shape as expected.
โWe have always said that our development of Soyuz [from Europeโs equatorial French Guiana launch site] was conditioned on a long-term cooperation with Russia on future launchers,โ Dordain said at ESAโs space operations center, Esoc, here Jan. 14 while monitoring the descent of ESAโs Huygens probe to Titan, Saturnโs largest moon.
ESA and the Arianespace commercial launch consortium together are paying 344 million euros ($447 million) to build a new Soyuz launch pad at Europeโs Guiana Space Center. Launches are scheduled to start in 2007.
The Soyuz deal, which had been opposed by some in Europe, was sold to ESA governments as a necessary price to pay for a joint effort with Russia on future launch-vehicle technology programs for both reusable and expendable rockets.
Snecma of Paris, builder of most Ariane rocket engines, has said recent contacts in Russia have found Russian companies more interested in selling technology they have already developed rather than cooperating โ on a non-exchange-of-funds basis โ with European companies.
โWe go to Russia and we say, โLetโs talk about cooperation in materials or motors for future rockets,’โ said Joel Barre, general manager of Snecmaโs space engine division. โTheir response is to show us what they have available off the shelf, and they invite us to consider a purchase. Thatโs not my idea of a cooperative program.โ
Barre said Jan. 10 that Snecma and other European companies are concerned that Europe has made good on its part of the bargain concerning Soyuz, and Russia has yet to respond with its end of the agreement.
โWe are financing Soyuz in Europe, and meanwhile Europeโs Ariane 5 rocket is fighting the Russian Proton rocket, its principal competitor, on the marketplace, where Russia can offer prices we canโt match,โ Barre said. โThere is at least a misunderstanding here about what a Euro-Russian cooperation will look like.โ
Dordain said he understood Barreโs concerns but countered that Russia, too, until recently had reason to doubt Europeโs sincerity.
It was not until December that the financial arrangement for Soyuz was settled in the form of a French government loan guarantee for Arianespaceโs financial contribution to the Soyuz project.
โFrom the Russiansโ view, we appeared to drag our feet on Soyuz,โ Dordain said. โIf they have been a little slow in putting into place a real cooperative effort, we have also been slow with our responsibilities. This whole arrangement is based on mutual trust. You will see things moving now fairly rapidly.โ
Antonio Fabrizi, ESAโs launcher director, was in Moscow the week of Jan. 13 to finalize the agreement, Dordain said. The Jan. 19 agreement will broadly cover Soyuz and collaborative work on future launchers. A separate subsidiary agreement will more specifically spell out what Russia and Europe could do as part of ESAโs Future Launcher Preparatory Program. Dordain said this second agreement is almost completed.
Dordain said that while a few definition studies might be contracted by ESA to Russian companies, the agreement is clear in saying neither side will be paying for the otherโs work.
Dordain said that the accord is balanced. โRussia will be receiving revenues from Soyuz launches in Kourou [French Guiana] and this obviously appeals to them. And it appeals to us as well, since ESA has already been using the Soyuz rocket for our missions. As for future launchers, it is less concrete than the Soyuz agreement but here too there is an interest on both sides to work together.โ
Comments: pdeselding@compuserve.com
