Failed satellite programmed with 'wrong co-ordinates'
Failed satellite programmed with
'wrong co-ordinates'
Dmitry Rogozin said Meteor-M had been programmed for lift-off from
a different launch site.
Speaking to Russian state TV, he blamed "human error".
"The rocket was programmed as if it was taking off from
Baikonur," he told the Rossyia 24 TV channel.
In fact, the rocket was actually taking off from new base
Vostochny, in the east of the country.
It contained eighteen smaller satellites belonging to research and
commercial companies from Russia, Norway, Sweden, the US, Canada, Germany and
Japan.
Russian space agency Roscosmos said last month that it had lost
contact with the weather satellite, which was worth 2.6 billion rubles ($58m,
£43m).
Russia launched its first satellite from Vostochny in April last
year, after delays and massive costs overruns. That launch also proved
embarrassing when a technical problem forced it to be delayed by a day, in the
presence of president Vladimir Putin.
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