Cospar 2 - Banner

Azerbaijan And Iran To Jointly Build Satellite, Cooperate In Satellite Communications

Iranian and Azerbaijani space officials meet in Baku, Azerbaijan, on 1 August 2016 to sign the space cooperation MoU. Photograph courtesy of Mehrs News Agency.

Azerbaijan and Iran have concluded negotiations on space cooperation, to include the Iranian use of Azerbaijani communications satellites and the joint development of a remote sensing satellite, according Azerbaijani media reports.

“We are currently holding negotiations on Iran’s use of satellites belonging to Azerbaijan. In addition, Iran has a satellite production technology. We can cooperate with Azerbaijan in this field. Our proposal is to make satellite with the scientific research of both countries,” Javad Azeri Jahromi, Iran’s minister for communications and information technology, told Azerbaijan’s Trend News Agency.

“Currently, Iran and Azerbaijan also cooperate in the field of postal communication, and we also intend to develop these relations. In the future, we also envisage expansion of cooperation in the field of postal financial services,” Jahromi added.

The discussions also included the joint Azerbaijani-Iranian construction of the TASİM fiber-optic cable that would provide another means of telecommunications connectivity between the two countries.

Azerbaijan, through its AzerCosmos state space corporation, operates the AzerSpace-1 and AzerSpace-2 communications satellites, and the high-resolution AzerSky Earth observation satellite. All three satellites are built by either U.S. or European satellite manufacturers.

Iran is reportedly a user of AzerSky satellite imagery, as previously reported by SpaceWatch.Global. 

These latest negotiations follow the space cooperation Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed by the two countries in August 2016 that placed the Iranian use of Azerbaijani communications satellites on the agenda.

Check Also

#SpaceWatchGL Opinion: 10 iconic marketing campaigns in Space

Marketing in outer space seems like an innovative idea, but it has 60+ years of history. Dr. Wernher von Braun, former Marshall Space Flight Center Director, pointed out on July 22, 1969: "Because without public relations we would have been unable to do it". Today, accelerated access to space provides unprecedented opportunities for #advertising stunts and viral marketing. Some campaigns raise ethical, environmental, and regulatory concerns, while others champion sustainability.