Kazakhstan’s Parliament Approves Spaceport Cooperation With Russia

Kazakhstan’s Parliament Approves Spaceport Cooperation With Russia

NUR-SULTAN, Dec 19 (NNN-KAZINFORM) – The lower house of Kazakh parliament, approved amendments to a Kazakh-Russian agreement, on building the Baiterek space rocket complex, at Baikonur Cosmodrome.

Kazakh Minister of Digital Development, Innovation and Aerospace Industry, Askar Zhumagaliev said, Kazakhstan plans to allocate 233 million U.S. dollars, to modernise the Zenit-M space launch facility.

Russia will carry out the production of Soyuz-5 carrier rocket, testing equipment, modernisation technical complexes and upgrading spacecraft, which will cost about 916 million U.S. dollars, Zhumagaliev said.

He added, the original plan was to build a launch pad for Angara rockets, but due to multiple delays, the two countries decided to cooperate on launching the Soyuz-5 medium-lift rockets.

“Both decided to implement the project on the basis of the Soyuz-5 launch vehicle. In general, Russia is responsible for the creation of the rocket, and we are responsible for the ground-based infrastructure,” Zhumagaliev said.

He said, the Baiterek project will help the Baikonur Cosmodrome maintain its leading position, and promote strategic partnership between Kazakhstan and Russia, in space area.

According to Tass, the Baiterek project is scheduled to be implemented from 2020 to 2023.

On Aug 22, 2018, Kazakhstan and Russia signed a protocol on the amendments and supplements to the bilateral agreement of Dec 22, 2004. The two sides agreed to build the Baiterek launch complex for Soyuz-5 at Baikonur.

The Baikonur Cosmodrome, located in southwestern Kazakhstan’s Kyzylorda region, is jointly managed by the Russian space agency Roscosmos and Russia’s Aerospace Forces. Russia leases the spaceport until 2050.– NNN-KAZINFORM

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