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China to build, launch 3rd Venezuelan satellite

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China to build, launch 3rd Venezuelan satellite
October 6, 2014, 5:32 am



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Photo taken on Jan. 10, 2009 shows the Bamari land station in El Sombrero, some 300 kilometers south of Caracas, Venezuela [Xinhua]

Venezuela on Sunday signed an agreement with a Chinese state-owned company to build and deliver into orbit the country’s third satellite with the help of Chinese technology. No details on cost and timeframe have yet been officially revealed.

The satellite will be named after the independence hero Antonio Jose de Sucre, with preceding satellites also named after 19th-century South American independence heroes.

The agreement, which was inked in the presence of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, was signed between the Venezuelan government and China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC), China’s sole commercial satellite launch service provider.

“I want to celebrate the agreement to build and launch our third satellite in cooperation with China. Now we’ll be more technologically independent with this new tool,” said Maduro at the signing ceremony.

China will also expand satellite technology transfer to Venezuela, Chinese President Xi Jinping said during his visit to Caracas in July this year.

In 2008 China launched Venezuela’s first satellite – the Venesat-1, or “Simon Bolivar”, named after independence leader Simon Bolivar – to carry communications gear.

Venezuela’s second satellite, a remote sensing satellite, was also launched from China in 2012, amied at carrying out land resource inspections, environmental protection, disaster detection and management, crop yield estimation and city planning.

China has granted a $4 billion credit line to Venezuela in return for oil and other products as President Xi Jinping wrapped up a 2-day visit to the South American nation in July.

During the leadership of its late iconic leader Hugo Chavez, Venezuela expanded its use of loan-for-oil agreements with China.

China-Venezuela bilateral trade increased from $1.4 million 40 years ago when diplomatic ties were first established to a whopping $19.2 billion in 2013.
 
Venezuela to build satellite "Sucre" in 36 months with China's help
The manufacturing and launching of Venezuela's third satellite will take some 36 months with the help of Chinese technology, said the country's head of planning and information on Monday.

The satellite, which was named after the independence hero Antonio Jose de Sucre, will have remote sensing capacities and support such strategic areas as health, energy, food security, border surveillance and agricultural planning, Ricardo Menendez told a press conference.

Minister of Science and Technology Manuel Fernandez also said the satellite is aimed at expanding the nation's capacity of planning and research.

"The Sucre satellite will have a camera with higher definition images which can be taken up to one meter from the surface. It will have greater transmission capacity, memory storage and new generation batteries that will give more power to the satellite," he said.

Menendez announced part of the satellite's production will be finished inside the country, which will set up a design center in the central region in January 2015.

According to Menendez, over 200 Venezuelan technicians have been trained in China and obtained qualifications in such fields as satellite operation.

In the presence of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on Sunday, Venezuela signed an agreement with China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC) to manufacture the satellite.

Venezuela's first satellite, a telecom satellite named after independence leader Simon Bolivar, was launched from China in 2008.

Venezuela's second satellite, a remote sensing satellite named after independence hero Francisco de Miranda, was launched into space also from China in 2012.

The second satellite is mainly used for the country's land resource inspections, environmental protection, disaster detection and management, crop yield estimation and city planning.

China has aided Venezuela in building and launching all its satellites with its mature technology.

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