Information and images gathered from space will be vital to government agencies for infrastructure development, rural and urban development planning, management of natural disasters and provision of accurate maps.
EIAST technicians who worked alongside South Korean engineers on Dubai-Sat 1 have taken the lead role in designing Dubai-Sat 2.
"The second satellite is currently in the early planning stage, but we already know that that there will be improvements in the quality of the data and images it delivers as a result of what our engineers have learned,"
EIAST project manager Salem Al Marri said today.
Al Marri confirmed EIAST's full support for the second Global Space Technology Forum, to be held at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre from 7-9 December, and will use the event as a platform to speak about their exciting launches and key projects. "It's very important to the industry to have an event dedicated to space technology, especially at a time when countries across the region are eager to join the space age in a big way," said Al Marri.
Satellite 2
"The forum will bring together the industry's key players and other world-leading space agencies and programmes, to share ideas, knowledge and progress. Next generation space research and commercial space applications present huge opportunities for everyone involved in this area," he added.
The Global Space Technology Forum was launched last November by Streamline Marketing Group. This year, senior directors from NASA and GEOS will be addressing the event, highlighting the strong support the event has gained from the international space community.
After Dubai-Sat 1 is launched from the Baikonur complex in Kazakstan, the former centre for the Soviet space programme, EIAST engineers will need three to six months to fine tune its systems before data gathered from space can be made available for use.
The Dubai-Sat projects are among more than 20 emerging national space projects in the Middle East and Africa participating in the Global Space Technology Forum in 2009, a region rapidly evolving as one of the key growth markets for the global space industry.
LSE Space Middle East, a UAE-based joint venture between LSE Space Engineering & Operations AG (Germany) and Lootah Technical Centre (Dubai, UAE) has also announced their support of the event as a silver sponsor.
Frank Niehaus, CEO, LSE Space Middle East said: "The Global Space Technology Forum is the first dedicated forum for space technologies in the Middle East. We attended last year's event and have increased our involvement in 2009, as part of our commitment to the UAE and the local companies dealing with space activities."
Niehaus, whose company specialises in Satellite Operations and Engineering, Ground Station Operations and Architecture, and Ground System Engineering said the UAE can benefit greatly from space technologies and applications.
"This region needs more access to space to accommodate the increasing demand of the local population for modern communication means and Earth Observation Systems. Space technology is a light house technology for every country, as it helps to develop leading edge technologies and advanced engineering know-how."
The emerging regional space industry will be a highlight of the December forum, which will draw senior representatives from space agencies and national space programmes, government officials and policy makers, as well as entrepreneurs, investors, engineers, scientists, and airline and aerospace senior management.
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