Astrium
wins satellite contract worth €263
million
27 May 2008
Astrium, has been commissioned by
the European Space Agency (ESA) to
develop and build the EarthCARE
Earth observation satellite. The
contract worth € 263 million was
signed in Berlin on the occasion of
the International Aerospace
Exhibition (ILA) by Volker Liebig,
ESA’s Director of Earth Observation,
Evert Dudok, CEO of Astrium
Satellites and Uwe Minne, Director
of Earth Observation and Science at
Astrium (Friedrichshafen, Germany),
in the presence of German Chancellor
Angela Merkel, ESA Director General
Jean-Jacques Dordain and Head of the
German Aerospace Centre (DLR)
Johann-Dietrich Wörner.
EarthCARE (Earth Clouds, Aerosols
and Radiation Explorer) will focus
on clouds, tiny particles in the
atmosphere – aerosols – and their
influence on atmospheric radiation.
Among other things, EarthCARE will
draw up vertical profiles of natural
and man-made aerosols, register the
distribution of water and ice and
their transport by clouds, and
investigate the interrelationships
between clouds and precipitation and
their effects on radiation. It will
be possible to derive profiles of
atmospheric heating and cooling by
clouds from a combination of the
measured aerosols and “cloud
elements”.
“The role of aerosols in cloud
formation and the interaction with
radiation is not completely
understood by science but plays an
important role in climate and
weather modelling. This is why the
EarthCARE proposal was selected”
said ESA’s Earth Observation
Director Dr. Volker Liebig
EarthCARE will thus contribute to a
better understanding of our climate
and deliver valuable data for the
numerical forecasting models of
climate researchers and
meteorologists. Weighing around
1.7 metric tons, the satellite is
scheduled to lift off into space in
September 2013. EarthCARE will spend
three years taking measurements from
a polar orbit (97° inclination) at
an altitude of about 400 kilometres.
“By offering an
innovative and future-oriented range
of products, Astrium is helping to
achieve a better understanding of
Earth’s sensitively balanced
ecosystem and encourage people to
treat it with greater care,” said
Astrium Satellites CEO Evert Dudok
to journalists in Berlin. “The
experience and know-how gained from
projects such as EarthCARE or the
recently awarded contracts for the
Sentinel family of satellites and
the polar-orbiting weather satellite
Metop give us an excellent basis and
serve as a reference for future
tasks such as the third generation
of Meteosat satellites.”
Astrium (Friedrichshafen, Germany)
will be responsible for the
industrial management of EarthCARE
and the integration and test
activities. The satellite is
equipped with four instruments, two
passive and two active sensors that
will supply a unique data package
with only one satellite mission.
Astrium (Toulouse, France) will
supply the active laser instrument
ATLID, while the platform (Astrium),
the Multi-Spectral Imager MSI (SSTL)
and the Broadband Radiometer BBR
(SEA) are being produced in the UK.
The fourth instrument is the Cloud
Profiling Radar CPR, which will be
supplied by the Japanese
Space Agency,
JAXA.