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ILS Launches at Record Pace

ship them and launch them

Farnborough UK (SPX) Jul 21, 2004
International Launch Services (ILS), which has amassed the lion's share of launch contracts in 2004, also is sending customers' satellites into orbit at a record pace.

ILS has been conducting back-to-back launch campaigns since November 2003, averaging one launch per month using either its Lockheed Martin-built Atlas vehicle or its Khrunichev-built Proton rocket.

With six missions successfully completed to date, ILS has launches on both vehicles planned for August. Three more are on the manifest through the end of the year.

As quickly as the rockets are launching, ILS is taking in new orders. ILS has been awarded a total of 11 missions this year for both commercial and government customers, giving it 73% of the available launches in its market.

These contracts include missions for the U.S. Air Force and the National Reconnaissance Office, as well as the world's largest satellite operators and a variety of direct-to-user service providers, such as DIRECTV, Intelsat, SES Global and Telesat.

Since the beginning of 2003, ILS has signed more new commercial contracts than all its competitors combined.

"We're having a great year," said ILS President Mark Albrecht. "We have the world's two most reliable vehicles, launching at a regular tempo that keeps the teams sharp. That's how we are meeting the customers' demands for reliability and the flexibility to provide them schedule assurance."

The Atlas launch vehicle family has achieved 100 percent success in 72 consecutive flights spanning 11 years. The Proton vehicle has a 96 percent success rate over its lifetime, which includes 307 launches for ILS and the Russian government combined. The Atlas flies from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., and the Proton launches from Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

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East Meets West To Solve Space Storm Mystery
Taiyuan, China (SPX) Jul 21, 2004
The exploration of near-Earth space will enter a new phase on 26 July when a spacecraft called Tan Ce 2 (Explorer 2) lifts off from Taiyuan spaceport, west of Beijing, on a Chinese Long March 2C rocket. The launch is currently scheduled to take place at 08:23 BST (07:23 GMT).







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