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Turkey to build a rocket launch site in Somalia to support Moon 2023 landing

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Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has revealed an ambitious timetable with the aim of going to the moon on uncrewed missions by 2023. Image: Turkish Space Agency (TUA)
Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has revealed an ambitious timetable with the aim of going to the moon
on uncrewed missions by 2023. Image: Turkish Space Agency (TUA)

Turkey has unveiled ambitious plans to head to the Moon in 2023, followed by a soft landing on the lunar surface in 2028, said the country’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Details of the country’s national space programme, which also involves building a spaceport in Somalia to facilitate launches, were unveiled by the President at the Bestepe National Congress and Culture Centre in February. Somalia is a longstanding partner of Turkey, and has an embassy in Ankara. It also hosts Turkey’s largest overseas training base called Camp TURKSON.

“The primary and most important mission of the program is to make the first contact with the Moon in our republic’s centennial year [2023],” Erdogan said at the meeting held in the country’s capital, Ankara.

The programme outlined by Erdogan revealed Turkey’s 10-year vision, strategies and objectives, including sending Turkish astronauts on a scientific mission in space, and its aspiring timeline to get to the Moon.

Two separate stages to make contact with the Moon on uncrewed missions are envisaged, the first being a rough lunar landing in just a couple of years.

“When completing this task, we will be one of the countries that have managed to reach the Moon, and we will gather necessary information for the second stage of the mission,” Erdogan said.

The second stage, which is set for 2028, will be a soft landing and would involve a shuttle that would carry out scientific research on the Earth’s natural satellite.

Both missions will be carried out with a hybrid rocket built by Delta V, an Istanbul-based space technology firm.

“We expect Delta V to develop engines that will make our own firing in space on our Moon mission,” said Turkey’s Industry and Technology minister Mustafa Varank during a visit to the company’s facilities last week.

Varank’s statement echoes that of Arif Karabeyoglu, Delta V’s chairman, who announced last year that a rocket engine which uses liquid oxygen and paraffin, a crucial space programme capability, is being produced by the company.

Middle East Eye (MME) news site has reported that Turkey’s space programme is expected to cost the country in excess of $1 billion. Included in that sum are governmental draft calculations that suggest to establish and maintain the spaceport in Somalia will cost more than $350 million.

A further $600 million (USD) will be awarded to Delta V for development of the rocket, although none of these figures have been officially confirmed by the Turkish government.

According to MME, Turkish government opposition were quick to point out that the country’s space agency has an annual budget of just over $40 million – a figure far too low for “such lofty objectives.”

However an unnamed source said the spending will be done through different government entities, “such as state-owned major defence industry companies, says MME.

Turkey is also planning to make headway in the satellite industry by developing its own new-generation satellites to end dependence on foreign systems.

Satellite production activities will be conducted under a single authority coordinated by the Turkish Space Agency (TUA) and will allow Turkey to “gain a higher share from the world satellite market by enhancing our competitiveness thanks to this move,” Erdogan explained.

The TUA was established in 2018 with the aim of joining a handful of other countries with space programmes.

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Source:room.eu.com/news