ESA And Spain's INTA
Update ESTRACK Station Agreement
(18 April 2008) Senior managers from ESA
and Spain's Instituto Nacional De Tecnica Aeroespacial (INTA) agreed today to
renew their joint use of space tracking facilities at the Maspalomas Space
Centre, Gran Canaria, Spain.
The site hosts ESA's 15m ESTRACK
antenna, which primarily provides routine support for the Agency's 4-spacecraft
Cluster mission.

Maspalomas station hosts a 15-metre antenna with reception in S- and X-Band and transmission in S-band. It is located on the campus of the Instituto Nacional de Tecnica Aerospacial (INTA), in the southern part of the Canary Islands' Gran Canaria, at Montaña Blanca. The station provides routine support for ESA's Cluster II mission and back-up and LEOP (Launch and Early Orbit Phase) support to other missions. (courtesy: ESA)
The new co-operation renews and updates the
existing March 2000 agreement and defines the collaboration between both
organisations for joint use of the facilities available at the Centro Espacial
de Canarias (CEC).
The agreement was signed at Maspalomas by Mr Fernando
González García, INTA Director General, and Gaele Winters, ESA
Director of Operations and Infrastructure, and aims to meet current and future
requirements of programs in the Earth exploration and space research
fields.
The new agreement is valid for 15 years, and serves as framework
for the relations between INTA and ESA in two basic areas:
It also establishes a basis for
collaboration for future domestic and ESA programmes through the joint use of
CEC facilities. This collaboration may be of particular importance for Spain's
National Earth Observation Programme that will include the Paz and INGENIO
satellites by 2011.
Maspalomas builds on Mercury, Gemini
heritage
The Maspalomas Space Centre was established in the 1960s by
NASA for tracking Mercury and Gemini spacecraft, and has belonged to INTA since
1975. Among other on-site facilities, INTA operates a 15m ESTRACK ground
terminal on behalf of ESA that is dedicated for tracking, telemetry and
commanding of scientific satellites and Ariane 5/ATV (Automated Transfer
Vehicle) launches.
Over the years, Maspalomas has been upgraded with a
number of facilities, including the Nodal Centre for the COSPAS-SARSAT
search-and-rescue programme; the Centre of Reception, Processing and Archiving
of Earth Observation Data (CREPAD); two 10m antennas for Earth exploration
satellite data reception; and several antennas for national and international
programmes.
CEC offers services to companies and institutions including
Hispasat (a grouping of Spanish communication satellites), Hisdesat (a
satellite services provider), Eumetsat (the European Organisation for the
Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites) and JAXA (the Japanese Space
Agency), and - since the 1980s - to ESA's ESOC and ESRIN
establishments.
ESA's Maspalomas terminal is part of the core ESTRACK
(European Space Tracking) network, comprising 13 terminals sited at nine
stations in six countries.
(source: ESA)