Russian flaw behind botched satnav satellite launch: Arianespace

View of the Jupiter Control Room at the Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana, October 20, 2011. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

PARIS (Reuters) - Investigators believe a Russian production flaw was behind the botched August launch of two satellites central to development of European satellite navigation system Galileo, the satellite launch company Arianespace said on Wednesday. Revealing the findings of an inquiry panel that studied why the satellites were put into the wrong orbit after launch from French Guiana last august, Arianespace said Russian firm NPO Lavochkin would correct a production flaw identified by investigators and that launches could resume from December. "The anomaly occurred during the flight of the launcher's fourth stage, Fregat, designed and produced by NPO Lavochkin. It occurred about 35 minutes after lift-off, at the beginning of the ballistic phase preceding the second ignition of this stage," said an Arianespace statement. "The Inquiry Board also eliminated the hypothesis that the anomaly could have been caused by the abnormal behavior of the Galileo satellites," said the statement. The August hitch was the latest setback for Galileo, which has been beset by delays, financing problems and questions over whether Europe needs to come up with a rival to the dominant U.S. Global Positioning System and Chinese and Russian systems. The European Union has approved a 7 billion-euro budget for Galileo and another navigation project between now and 2020. It says Galileo will strengthen Europe's position in a satellite-navigation market expected to be worth 237 billion euros in 2020. (Reporting By Brian Love; editing by Mark John)