Commercial Director of JSC OKB Fifth Generation Vladimir Bodrov

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tanjimajuha20
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Commercial Director of JSC OKB Fifth Generation Vladimir Bodrov

Post by tanjimajuha20 »

satellite launched into orbit will be "private".

"We welcome the state's attention to solving problems in the space industry, as well as the opportunities that the bill describes in terms of public-private partnerships. For example, such tasks as reducing the cost of launching a kilogram of payload into orbit can only be implemented jointly," a representative of the press service of Bureau 1440 told a ComNews correspondent.

believes that the industry finland whatsapp number database has been making steps towards private capital for several years now: "This work began with the liberalization of licensing of the space industry and the exclusion from the license of all work with space infrastructure and tests not related to space launches. Cooperation with private companies is also developing positively, and we see this in the emergence of large players and the interest of institutional investors. The new Federal Law resolves many legal conflicts that were discovered in the process of real work of private owners with Roscosmos. Of course, the law will strengthen the trust of private capital in PPP. On March 22, regardless of the draft of the new Federal Law, we concluded a tripartite agreement between the State Corporation Roscosmos, us and JSC Satellite System Gonets. As part of this partnership, we plan to expand the commercial capabilities of the Gonets group.

Deputy CEO for Business Development at SR Space Sergey Mardanov told ComNews about the company's plans for cooperation with the government: "We expect that the new Federal Law will provide a great incentive for concluding forward contracts and will attract good investments to the industry. In particular, it is important for us to obtain forward contracts for launch services and for purchasing data for government agencies. This will probably be organized through concessions. Therefore, we hope that we will become data suppliers for Roscosmos and other government corporations and interested ministries in the future. But at the same time, we do not want to limit ourselves to this area, since the role of space data is high in other federal national projects, and there is greater potential for implementing PPPs."


Behind all the talk about "not allowing private investors" one can always see "donkey ears" - the desire to get some money FROM THE STATE, and not TO BRING MONEY into new products and services that can be COMPETITIVE on the market.
Nowhere has data been published on what kind of INVESTMENTS a private individual can actually make, but they already REQUIRE some "forward" contracts from the state. For what reason, one might ask. Should we (the state) once again engage in charity in relation to "private business", is this another "sacred cow" that must be fed only because they want to? In space activities there are well-established general economic laws: if the project is economically calculated and pays for itself - invest money and receive a legal income on the market, if there is no such confidence, then there is no point in demanding money from the state for dubious projects. Rocket and space activities in general (it has long been known) are a high-risk and low-profit (at first) sphere of the economy, the production of those satellites brings very modest profits (the margin is incomparable with the sale of vapes, dog food, blockbuster films and other masterpieces of foreign innovation). So do not hope that under the guise of a private public partnership someone will receive large incomes due to the state protection.
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