. Earth Science News .
Nigerian Announces Plans To Manufacture And Launch Own Satellite

File photo: Nigeria has already produced Microsats (pictured).
by Staff Writers
Abuja (AFP) May 11, 2006
Nigeria Wednesday announced a 25-year plan to venture into space technology by manufacturing and launching locally its own satellite.

"The 25-year plan has the objective that we should be able to produce a Nigerian astronaut by 2015, launch a satellite manufactured in Nigeria by between 2018 and 2030," Science and Technology minister Turner Isoun told reporters after a cabinet meeting.

Isoun said the federal cabinet had already set up a seven-member ministerial committee to look into the details of the project, including its cost.

The committee will co-opt Nigerian local experts and those abroad as well as entering into strategic partnership with friendly countries, he said.

Nigeria, he said, had started training engineers, scientists and technicians in satellite technology.

Nigeria, which went into partnership with Surrey Satellite Technology Limited of Britain to launch in 2003 a low orbit remote sensing satellite, is due to launch a communication satellite by the first quarter of next year in partnership with Chinas Great Wall Industries Corporation.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Surrey Satellite Technology

Students Complete 20 Femto Satellites
Ashburn VA (SPX) May 11, 2006
AeroAstro has announced the successful completion of twenty femto satellite models. The models were assembled by kindergarten students from Georgetown Day School as part of their field trip at AeroAstro's headquarters in Ashburn, Virginia.







  • MSV Supports New Laws Boosting Satellite Communications Provisions For Emergencies
  • Indians At Risk In Afghanistan
  • Pacific Tsunami Alert System Tests To Start Mid-May
  • Bush Contributed To Extent Of Katrina Aftermath Says Senator Lieberman

  • Recent Hurricane Upsurge A Weak Link To Global Warming
  • China, India Lead 15-Percent Rise In CO2 Emissions
  • Dutch Study Sheds Light On Climate Change's Threat To Birds
  • Greenhouse Gas Emissions Increased In 2005

  • Tibet Provides Passage For Chemicals To Reach The Stratosphere
  • Raytheon Tests Advanced Space-Based Weather Sensor
  • African Wetland Managers Armed With New Technology
  • ESA To Host Atmospheric Science Conference

  • World Bank Carbon Trading Gets Off To An Explosive Start
  • Scientists Discover Super Superconductor
  • China's Three Gorges Dam To Be Completed On May 20
  • Lives Could Be Saved By Switching Household Fuels

  • US Bird Flu Toll Could Be As High As 2 Million
  • H5N1 Adapts To Summer, Water, Heat
  • AIDS Cocktail Could Be Soon Down To Just One Pill
  • China Reports 18th Human Case Of Bird Flu

  • Train In Slovenia Kills Entire Bear Family
  • Malaysia Seizes Lizards, Tortoises Illegally Bound For Thailand
  • The Secret Lives Of Sea Slugs
  • Bats Use Guided Missile Strategy To Capture Prey

  • New "Toxic" Ship Bound For India
  • China Says River Clean After Thaw
  • China's "Cancer Villages" Pay Heavy Price For Economic Progress
  • Russian Ecologists Despair Over Lack Of Govt Vision

  • Evolutionary Forces Explain Why Women Live Longer than Men
  • Rwandan Pygmies Fight For Survival In Eco-Sensitive Times
  • Child Labor On Way Out
  • Monkey Business Equals Human Business

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement