
An Ariane 5 ECA launch photo, courtesy of Arianespace
During that day, Astrium and its industrial partners talked to ESA about ways to improve the existing management procedures for contracts accompanying production (ARTA programme, maintenance in operational conditions, etc.), as their complexity has slowed down production processes. Alain Charmeau, CEO of Astrium Space Transportation, underlined the necessity of launching the development phase on the Ariane 5 Midlife Evolution (ME) to reinforce the overall effectiveness and the robustness of the industrial chain. “These are excellent means to facilitate our industrial cooperation, develop skills, anticipate any upcoming production constraints and adopt collective measures that reflect our firm commitment to reducing overall costs,” he stated. “It’s a win-win situation both for the industrial partners and the government agencies.”
The participants were able to discuss the full range of issues thanks to the presence of all the different players who guarantee Europe’s long-term access to space: ESA, the industrial partners and Arianespace, the Astrium subsidiary that is responsible for launch operations and commercial activities. Astrium is guarantor for the reliability of Ariane, overseeing the quality of its industrial products, the development work and the launch vehicle integration operations in Guiana.


