Ethiopia celebrates launch of first satellite

Agence France-Presse

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Ethiopia celebrates launch of first satellite
(UPDATED) It is the 8th launch of an African satellite this year, topping the previous record of seven in 2017

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (UPDATED) – Ethiopia launched its first satellite on Friday, December 20, a landmark achievement for the country’s space program that caps a banner year for the African space industry.  

The launch of the Ethiopian Remote Sensing Satellite (ETRSS) took place at a space station in China, though scores of Ethiopian and Chinese officials and scientists gathered at the Entoto Observatory and Research Center outside the capital, Addis Ababa, early Friday to watch a live broadcast. 

“This will be a foundation for our historic journey to prosperity,” Deputy Prime Minister Demeke Mekonnen said in a speech. “This technological infrastructure is important even if it’s delayed.” 

It is the 8th launch of an African satellite this year, topping the previous record of seven in 2017, according to Temidayo Oniosun, managing director of Space in Africa, a Nigeria-based firm that tracks African space programs. 

“We can say that 2019 is pretty much the best year in the history of the African space industry,” Oniosun told Agence France-Presse. 

The launch makes Ethiopia the 11th African country to put a satellite into space. Egypt was the first in 1998. 

All told, 41 African satellites have now been launched – 38 from individual countries and three more that were multilateral efforts, Oniosun said. 

None of those launches has taken place from African soil. 

Data provided by Ethiopia’s satellite is expected to paint a fuller picture of the country’s agriculture, forestry, and mining resources and improve responses to flooding and other disasters. 

China covered most of the $8 million costs of the satellite, according to an official involved in Ethiopia’s space program who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to disclose details of the project. 

Humble beginnings
The country’s space program was originally championed by private individuals, who formed the Ethiopian Space Science Society (ESSS) in 2004.

Paulos Alemayehu, a longtime member of the group, said many were at first skeptical of the organization’s ambitions to develop an Ethiopian satellite.

“They were saying, ‘In a country where tap water is not even reaching the upper stories of buildings, what the hell are you talking about?'” he recalled.

Paulos credited Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed for taking a special interest in the program and for encouraging the partnership with China when he served as minister of science and technology in 2015 and 2016.

The government established the Ethiopian Space Science and Technology Institute in 2016.

At a press briefing ahead of Friday’s launch, Innovation and Technology Minister Getahun Mekuria said the satellite would ultimately save Ethiopia money as the country would no longer need to pay for remote-sensing data from foreign satellites.

“After the launch of the ETRSS-1 is done, we will work to be self-sufficient maybe at our third or fourth satellite, using our own domestic system,” he said.

The importance of the data provided by the new satellite is secondary to the sense of pride it can instill in Ethiopians, Paulos said.

Ethiopia, which has a population of more than 100 million, has one of the world’s fast-growing economies.

GDP expanded annually at 9.9 percent on average from 2007/8 to 2017/18, according to the World Bank.

“For us as a society, we are valuing this launch as something which lifts our national pride,” Paulos said.

“You know, this is a very poor country. Many in the younger generation don’t have big hopes of reaching space. But today we are giving this generation hope, helping this generation to think big and have self-esteem.”  – Rappler.com

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