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Test-firing of rockets at Scottish spaceport a ‘big moment’

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Test-firing of rockets at Scottish spaceport a ‘big moment’

The successful test-firing of a rocket on the Shetland Islands is a “big moment” ahead of the first space launch due later this year, the head of the UK Space Agency has said.

Dr Paul Bate praised the “hot test” of a German rocket’s first stage at SaxaVord Spaceport last week, saying the UK could become the leading country in Europe for small satellite launches.




He also said there should be no “race to the bottom” in regulation of the industry, after concerns were voiced that there is too much red tape involved in launching from the UK.

Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA) test-fired four Helix engines from the first stage of their rocket, One, sitting atop a 12-metre high launch stool.

The rocket stage was transported by sea and road from Germany to SaxaVord at the northernmost tip of the UK.

Another space launch is expected to take place next year from the Sutherland Spaceport on the Scottish mainland, Bate said, with this one being a rocket from UK company Orbex.

The head of the UK Space Agency spoke to the PA news agency at the Space Propulsion Conference, which is taking place in Glasgow, bringing together organisations involved in rocketry and spacecraft from around the word.

Scotland’s “wonderful geography” means it is an ideal location for launches to polar and sun-synchronous orbits, he said, with several sites hoping to host vertical or horizontal launches in future.

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