The Guiana Space Centre (; CSG) also called Europe's Spaceport is a French and European spaceport to the northwest of Kourou in French Guiana, a region of France in South America.
Operational since 1968, it is particularly suitable as a location for a spaceport.
It fulfills the two major geographical requirements of such a site:
It is near the equator, so that less energy is required to manoeuvre a spacecraft into an equatorial, geostationary orbit.
It has open sea to the east, so that lower stages of rockets and debris from launch failures are unlikely to fall on human habitations.
Rockets launch to the east to take advantage of the angular momentum provided by Earth's rotation.
The European Space Agency (ESA), the French space agency CNES (National Centre for Space Studies), and the commercial companies Arianespace and Azercosmos conduct launches from Kourou.
This was the spaceport used by the ESA to send supplies to the International Space Station using the Automated Transfer Vehicle.
History
The location was selected in 1964 to become the spaceport of France.
In 1975, France offered to share Kourou with ESA."
Installation of the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana" .
Guiana Space Centre official website"Europe's Spaceport" .
European Space Agency official website Commercial launches are bought also by non-European companies.
ESA pays two thirds of the spaceport's annual budget, and has also financed the upgrades made during the development of the Ariane launchers.
On 4 April 2017, the centre was occupied by 30 labour union leaders in the midst of the 2017 social unrest in French Guiana, but was taken back on 24 April 2017.
Facilities
Kourou is located approximately  north of the equator, at a latitude of 5°.
It is a common misconception that the main advantage of launching a rocket from the equator is the extra boost provided by the speed of the Earth's rotation.
For example, the eastward boost provided by the Earth's rotation is about  at the Guiana Space Centre, as compared to about  at the United States east coast Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and Kennedy Space Center spaceports which are at 28°27′N latitude in Florida.
This means that rockets need around 60 m/s more delta-v to reach low earth orbit (LEO) from Cape Canaveral, which is an insignificant disadvantage.
In reality, the main benefit of Kourou is that the near-equatorial launch location provides an advantage for launches to low-inclination (or geostationary) Earth orbits compared to launches from spaceports at higher latitude.
This is because rockets can be launched into orbits with an inclination of as low as ~6°.
The lowest inclination a rocket from Cape Canaveral could be launched to is 28.5° (the latitude of Cape Canaveral).
Inclination change burns already require significant amounts of delta-v, so needing to change inclination by 28.5° seriously affects a rocket's capability to send satellites into a geostationary transfer orbit (GTO).
As a result of these phenomena, similarly sized Proton and Ariane 5 rockets can send similar payloads to LEO.
However, the Proton, launched from high latitudes in Russia, can only send 6,270 kg to GTO while a Kourou-launched Ariane 5 can send more than 10,000 kg to GTO.
However, the massive SpaceX Falcon Heavy makes up for the geographic disadvantage of Cape Canaveral by lifting up to 26,700 kg to GTO.
BEC / ELA-1 / ELV
Originally built in the 1960s under the name of Base Équatoriale du CECLES ( Equatorial Base), the pad located at  was designed for the Europa-II launch vehicle.
One Europa-II was launched from the site in 1971 which ended in failure due to a guidance problem, before the programme was cancelled.
The pad was demolished, and subsequently rebuilt as the first launch complex for Ariane as ELA ().
Redesignated later as ELA-1, it was used for Ariane 1 and Ariane 2 and 3 launches until being retired in 1989.
In November 2001, it was refurbished again for the Vega rocket and renamed ELV ().
The first launch was performed on 13 February 2012.
ELA-2
The ELA-2 pad (), located at , built in 1986, had been used for Ariane 4 launches from 1988 until 2003.
Before 1988, although purpose-built for Ariane 4, the pad hosted a Ariane-2 and two Ariane-3 launches.
The complex consisted of two areas: the launcher preparation zone and the launch pad itself, separated by one kilometer, allowing a launcher to be assembled in the preparation zone while another launches from the pad.
A mobile service tower at the launch pad provided a protected environment for payload installation and final preparation of the rocket.
In September 2011 the pad's service tower was demolished using explosives.
ELA-3
ELA-3 () has been active for Ariane 5 launches since 1996 (Ariane 501).
This facility is located at  and covers an area of .
ELA-4
ELA4 is located along the Route de l'Espace in the Roche Christine site at , between ELA-3 and ELS launch facilities.
CNES was responsible for the construction of the Ariane 6 ground segments including the new launch pad.
Earthworks on the 150 hectare launch site began at the end of June 2015 and was completed at the start of 2016.
Four platforms were leveled to accommodate the launch pad, the liquid oxygen and hydrogen tanks and the assembly building.
Civil engineering works on the flame trench and other buildings began in the summer of 2016 and ended in 2019.
The new launch facily was inaugurated on 28 September 2021 with first flight of the Ariane 6 scheduled in 2022.
ELS / Soyuz at CSG
ESA has built ELS () at  for launching Russian-built Soyuz-2 rockets.
The first Soyuz launch from ELS was postponed several times, but launched on 21 October 2011.SpaceflightNow's VS01 flight status page
ELS is located on the territory of Sinnamary commune,  from Kourou harbor.
It is  northwest of the site used for the Ariane 5 launches.
Under the terms of the Russo-European joint venture, ESA will augment its own launch vehicle fleet with Soyuz rockets — using them to launch ESA or commercial payloads — and the Russians will get access to the Kourou spaceport for launching their own payloads with Soyuz rockets.
Russia will use the Guiana Space Centre in addition to Baikonur Cosmodrome.
The Guiana location has the significant benefit of greatly increased payload capability, owing to the near equatorial position.
A Soyuz rocket with a 1.7 tonnes to geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) performance from Baikonur will increase its payload potential to 2.8 tonnes from the Guiana launch site.
Le Port Spatial de l'Europe (CNES)
The ELS project is being co-funded by Arianespace, ESA, and the European Union, with CNES being the prime contractor.
The project has a projected cost of approximately €320 million, where €120 million are allocated for modernizing the Soyuz vehicle.
The official opening of the launch site construction occurred on 27 February 2007.
Excavation work however, had previously begun several months beforehand.
On 13 September 2010, Spaceflight Now reported that after several delays in the construction of a mobile gantry the launch pad had been finished, and the first flight of the Soyuz was expected to occur in early 2011.
By October 2010, 18 launch contracts had been signed.
Arianespace has ordered 24 launchers from Russian industry.
On 21 October 2011, two Galileo IOV-1 and IOV-2 satellites were launched using a Soyuz-ST rocket, in the "first Russian Soyuz vehicle ever launched from Europe's Spaceport in French Guiana."
Final assembly building
Astrium assembles each Ariane 5 launcher in the Launcher Integration Building.
The vehicle is then delivered to the Final Assembly Building for payload integration by Arianespace.
The Final Assembly Building is located  from the ELA-3 launch zone.
The mobile launch table completes the trip with an Ariane 5 in about one hour.
It is then secured in place over the launch pad's flame ducts.
Launches
Launch safety
Fire safety is ensured by a detachment of the Paris Fire Brigade, a branch of the French Army.
Security around the base is ensured by French Gendarmerie forces, assisted by the 3rd Foreign Infantry Regiment of the French Foreign Legion.
Before and during launch windows, CSG facility security is significantly enhanced by anti-personnel and anti-aircraft measures, the exact configurations of which are classified by the French military.
All entrants to the launch complex are also subject to checks for proof of permission to enter the facility.
The Guiana Space Centre (as per CNES) also contains the Îles du Salut, a former penal colony including the infamous Devil's Island.
Now a tourist site, the islands are under the launching trajectory for geosynchronous orbit and have to be evacuated during launches.
Early launches
10 March 1970 - The first Diamant-B launched the DIAL/MIKA and DIAL/WIKA satellites.
DIAL/MIKA failed during launch, but it entered orbit with a total mass of 111 kg.
DIAL/WIKA provided data for about two months after launch.
Recent launches
5 October 2007 — An Ariane 5 GS launched from CSG carrying Intelsat 11 and Optus D2.
9 March 2008 — An Ariane 5 launched carrying the ATV (Automated Transfer Vehicle) Jules Verne in preparation for docking with the International Space Station (ISS).
This was the first launch of the ESA unmanned resupply craft.
18 April 2008 — An Ariane 5 launched carrying Vinasat-1 — Vietnam's first satellite.
14 August 2008 — An Ariane 5 carrying Superbird 7 for Mitsubishi Electric Corporation and AMC-21 for SES Americom
20 December 2008 — An Ariane 5 carrying HOT BIRD 9 and W2M for Eutelsathttp://www.eutelsat.com/satellites/HB9-W2M.html
14 May 2009 — An Ariane 5 carrying the ESA's Herschel and Planck space telescopes
1 July 2009 — An Ariane 5 carrying TerreStar-1, the heaviest commercial telecommunications satellite ever launched
18 December 2009 — An Ariane 5 carrying Helios 2B European military observation satellite used by France, Belgium, Spain and Greece.
21 May 2011 — 04:38 (GMT+08:00) An Ariane 5 ECA launch vehicle launched carrying ST-2 Satellite twice as powerful Singtel's first satellite ST-1 which was launched back in 1998.
It will provide 20% more transponder capacity and a wider coverage footprint than ST-1, with C-band and Ku-band coverage of the Middle East, Central Asia, Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia.
21 October 2011 — A Soyuz-2 carrying two Galileo satellites was launched.
This was the first launch of a Soyuz rocket at the Centre Spatial Guyanais.
17 December 2011 — A Soyuz carrying the French space agency's Pleiades 1 Earth imaging satellite, four ELISA electronic intelligence satellites, and the SSOT remote sensing satellite for the Chilean military.
This was the second launch of a Soyuz at the Guiana Space Centre.
13 February 2012 — The Vega, which was designed in Italy, lifted off at 10:00 UTC on its maiden voyage.
The launcher released nine satellites into orbit: two Italian satellites and seven pico-satellites.
5 July 2012 — The unmanned Ariane 5 rocket took off to send an American communication satellite and European weather-monitoring spacecraft into orbit.
Liftoff occurred at 21:36 UTC.
30 August 2013 — Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched the advanced multi-band communication satellite GSAT-7.India launches first defence satellite GSAT-7  It was 17th Indian satellite launched from ESA with Ariane 5.Navy's first satellite GSAT-7 now in the Space  The Hindu, August 30, 2013 by Madhumati D. S.
16 October 2014 — An Ariane 5 launch vehicle carrying the communication satellite ARSAT-1 to orbit.
It is the first geostationary satellite built by a Latin American country, Argentina, and the second one of the Americas, after USA.
30 September 2015 — An Ariane 5 launch vehicle carrying the communication satellite ARSAT-2 to orbit, being the second Argentine geostationary satellite built in two years.
1 October 2015 — Sky Muster (NBN-Co 1A) is a communication satellite launched on an Ariane 5 ECA launch vehicle.
Sky Muster is the first satellite of an operation to improve Australia's internet with the NBN program.
6 October 2016 — Sky Muster II (NBN-Co 1B) is a communication satellite launched on an Ariane 5 ECA launch vehicle.
Sky Muster II is the second satellite of an operation to improve Australia's internet with the NBN program.
28 January 2017 — A Soyuz-2 STB carrying the geostationary communication satellite Hispasat 36W-1 to orbit.
It is the first of the ESA's "Small-GEO" class of satellites.
14 February 2017 - An Ariane 5 launch vehicle carrying the commercial communication satellites Sky Brasil 1 (Intelsat 32e) and Telekom 3S launched the satellites to a geostationary orbit.
25 January 2018 - Partial failure of Ariane 5 launch vehicle on Ariane flight VA241.
19 October 2018 - An Ariane 5 launch vehicle launches the European-Japanese BepiColombo mission to Mercury.
5 February 2019 - Ariane 5 launched the Saudi Geostationary Satellite  SGS-1 (also known as SaudiGeosat-1/HellasSat-4).
11 July 2019 - Vega launch vehicle failed to launch Falcon Eye 1 satellite for United Arab Emirates Armed Forces.
15 August 2020 - An Ariane 5 launched MEV-2 and Intelsat 10-02 Galaxy-30.
Future launches
24 December 2021 James Webb Space Telescope.
Launch statistics
, Kourou counts amongst the spaceports with the highest percentage of successful launches, both successive and overall.
Here is a chronology of all orbital launches from the Kourou spaceport since 1970, under the French and European space programmes.
Flights by launcher
In development:
Active:
Retired: Flights by mission outcome
Charts include all orbital launches from Kourou; sounding rockets are excluded.Historical data: launch tables from List of Ariane launches, Soyuz ST, Vega and Encyclopedia Aeronautica.Last updated on 5 December 2021.
See also
French space program
European Space Operations Centre (ESOC)
European Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC)
European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC)
European Astronaut Centre (EAC)
European Centre for Space Applications and Telecommunications (ECSAT)
ESA Centre for Earth Observation (ESRIN)
European Space Tracking Network (ESTRACK)
European Space Agency (ESA)
3rd Foreign Infantry Regiment
References
External links
Soyouz in Guiana
Europe's Spaceport – information from ESA
List of Stratospheric Balloons launched from CSG – information from StratoCat
Arianespace mission status – information on current and upcoming Ariane missions; list of past missions
