May 24 News Items

Coast Guard Establishes Launch Safety Zone for Alaska Spaceport (Source: US Coast Guard)
The Coast Guard has established a Safety Zone in the vicinity of Narrow Cape and Ugak Island due to upcoming operations at the Kodiak Launch Complex. The Safety Zone is in effect from May 24 through May 27, 2007, between 2 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. each day, or until cancelled. Unauthorized entry into or through this zone is strictly prohibited and may result in civil and/or criminal penalties, including fines of up to $32,500. There will also be a hazardous rocket impact areas established at points where the rocket stages are predicted to enter the ocean.

Blocked by U.S., China Finds it Own Way to Space (Source: International Herald Tribune)
For years, China has chafed at efforts by the United States to exclude it from full membership in the world's elite space club. So, lately, China seems to have hit on a solution: create a new club. Beijing is trying to position itself as a space benefactor to the developing world - the same countries, in some cases, whose natural resources China covets here on Earth. The latest, and most prominent, example came last week when China launched a communications satellite for Nigeria in a project that serves as a tidy case study of how space has become another arena where China is trying to exert its soft power.

Not only did China design, build and launch the satellite for oil-rich Nigeria - it also provided a huge loan to help pay the bill. China has also signed a satellite contract with another major oil supplier, Venezuela. It is developing an earth observation satellite system with Bangladesh, Indonesia, Iran, Mongolia, Pakistan, Peru and Thailand. And it has organized a satellite association in Asia. For China, the strategy is a blend of self-interest, broader diplomacy and, from a business standpoint, an effective way to break into the satellite market. Satellites have become status symbols and technological necessities for many countries that want an ownership stake in the digital world dominated by the West, analysts say. Visit http://www.iht.com/bin/print.php?id=5843980 to view the article.

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