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RUSSIAN SPACE
Russian space agency needs reforms - Roscosmos head
by Staff Writers
Arkhangelsk,Russia (RIA Novosti) Sep 23, 2011

File image: Vladimir Popovkin.

The head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos said on Thursday that recent failed launches were a reflection of the agency's management problems.

"We have found the causes [of the failures] and we are trying to identify the people who are responsible...But the troubles go much deeper to the level of management and control within the organization," Popovkin said on the sidelines of the Arctic Dialogue conference in the northern Russia city of Archangelsk.

"Roscosmos needs changes. I wouldn't say drastic changes, but it should be reformed nonetheless," he said.

The Russian aerospace industry has faced a series of misfortunes over the last nine months. In December, 2010, a Proton-M booster rocket failed to put three Glonass-M satellites into orbit.

The launch of the Rokot booster rocket carrying a military geodesic satellite Geo-IK-2 ended in failure in February.

After the first two mishaps, a number of senior space industry officials were fired and Roscosmos's chief, Anatoly Perminov, was forced to resign.

However, the problems persisted as the aerospace industry failed to manufacture the planned number of spacecraft and incidents with the launches continued.

On August 18, a Russian Proton-M rocket lost a prized Express-AM4 satellite that was designed to provide digital television and secure government communications for Siberia and the Far East.

One week after the Express-AM4 went off course, a Soyuz-U booster malfunctioned, preventing the Progress M-12M cargo spacecraft from reaching orbit. Its debris fell in south Siberia's Altai Republic.

The loss of Glonass satellites alone cost the state 4.3 billion rubles ($152.2 million).

Source: RIA Novosti

Related Links
Roscosmos
Station and More at Roscosmos
S.P. Korolev RSC Energia
Russian Space News




 

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RUSSIAN SPACE
Bad weather hampers search for debris of Russian space freighter
Gorno-Altaisk, Russia (RIA Novosti) Sep 05, 2011
Poor weather conditions in South Siberia's Altai Republic may prevent the search for the crash site of a Progress-M spacecraft for the second consecutive day, a Russian space official said on Friday. The debris of the Progress M-12M space freighter presumably fell in the Altai mountains after the spacecraft failed to separate from the Soyuz-U carrier rocket in an abortive launch on August ... read more


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