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Brazilian Space Agency Issues First Operator Licenses for Space Activities

RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL – The Brazilian Space Agency (AEB) has issued its first operator licenses for space launch activities to a domestic software developer and an American engineering services company.

AEB awarded the licenses to Essado de Morais Ltda. from the city of Franca, SP, Brazil, and Orion Applied Science & Technology LLC of Manassas, VA, USA, the space agency said in a press release.

Essado de Morais is the developer of custom software that has experience in telecommunications. Orion is an engineering company with expertise in satellites and other areas.

Alcantara Base in Maranhão State, Brazil.
Alcântara Base in Maranhão State, Brazil. (Photo: internet reproduction)

AEB established a new procedur earlier this year to license companies capable of carrying out space launch activities from Brazil’s little-used Alcântara Launch Center.

“Space launch activities are the set of actions associated with launching satellites and other types of payloads, orbital and suborbital, or in any other position in outer space, through launch vehicles, as well as the return phase,” AEB said.

“They also include activities to prepare and conduct the operation by the launch center, complying with the safety rules established by the Brazilian Space Agency (AEB).”

The license does not authorize a company to conduct a launch from Alcântara. That approval will be handled under a different procedure.

To qualify for an operator license, an applicant needs to demonstrate that it has already carried out space-related projects and that it has the staff and capabilities to carry out the activities it proposes.

“The objective is to verify the existence of technical knowledge in companies already established and in companies that want to enter the space sector,” AEB said.

Foreign companies can qualify for licenses if they have an office or legal representation in Brazil and they are in compliance with tax and labor laws.

Alcântara is located within 2 degrees of the equator, which is ideal for launching geosynchronous communications satellites. The space center is also capable of launching spacecraft into polar orbits.

However, the space center is primarily used for suborbital sounding rocket launches. Brazil’s efforts to develop Alcântara for orbital flights have floundered. The VLS-1 small satellite launcher program ended in 2016 after 22 years of effort that included a launchpad explosion that killed 21 workers in 2003.

A joint Brazilian-Ukrainian project to launch the Cyclone-4 rocket from Alcântara also ended in 2015 after nine years or work with partially completed facilities and zero launches.

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