Minister of Communications Technology, Mrs. Omobola Johnson
| credits: File copy
Despite spending 40.12m pounds (about N9.94bn) to build two earth
observations satellites in 2011, Nigeria has turned to Britain to get
images from the satellites, launched into the orbit on August 17, 2011.
THE PUNCH authoritatively learnt that the ground station
located in Abuja for the control of the satellites was not equipped with
the laboratory to process images downloaded from the satellites.
A Presidency source, which expressed displeasure over the
development, noted that provision was made for the laboratory in the
original contract between Britain’s Surrey Satellite Technologies
Limited and the Federal Government.
The source said that the office of the National Security Adviser had
directed the National Space Research and Development Agency to produce
an aerial map of Maiduguri and other volatile cities in the North as a
means of monitoring terrorist activities in the area.
The maps were intended to help security agencies to identify possible
operational bases used by terrorist groups to plan and launch attacks.
Further investigation revealed that the Director-General, NASRDA, Dr.
Seidu Mohammed, had to resort to SSTL, the United Kingdom firm that
constructed the nation’s three earth observation satellites, to get the
maps when the agency could not produce the images.
At a press conference in Abuja on Friday, Mohammed had shown images
captured by the satellites, processed in the UK instead of Abuja.
Many of the images which he displayed were on Maiduguri.
Although Mohammed failed to confirm the directive from the National
Security Adviser, he disclosed that the images could be put to security
use.
He also confirmed that the agency had been liaising with security officials on the use of the images.
When the procurement of the images from UK was queried by our
correspondent, Mohammed said it was necessary to listen to professionals
rather than those that were intent on “politicising space technologies
in the country.”
The NASRDA boss disclosed that since the satellites were put in the
orbit, they had been able to take about 145 images. Most of the images
were on display by the agency on Friday.
Some of the images included the Three Arms Zone in Abuja, the Dubai
Skyline, Mining Sites in Peru, the Salt Lake City Airport in the United
States of America, as well as some sites in Abu Dhabi (UAE), Oklahoma
and Los Angeles (USA).
The contract for the construction of NigeriaSat-2 was awarded to SSTL
in 2006 at a cost of 34m pounds, while 18 per cent of the cost was
spent on the insurance of the spacecrafts, bringing the cost to 40.12m
pounds.
As part of the package, 26 Nigerian engineers were trained in the
construction of satellite. Hands-on experience acquired from the
construction was later put to use in the construction of the
experimental satellite – the NigeriaSat-X.
Experts say potential areas of application of the two satellites
include agriculture, forestry, land use and mapping, environmental and
disaster monitoring, mitigation and management, geological mapping and
transportation.
Others are hydrology and water resources, population and urban
development, National Geospatial Data Infrastructure, as well as
military, security and tourism applications.
NigeriaSat-2 is a high resolution satellite with a 2.5m panchromatic
view, an improvement on NigeriaSat-1 launched in 2003 which has 32m
panchromatic camera.
Our correspondent reports that the absence of a processing laboratory
in the Abuja ground station seems to have given more powers of control
to the company that built the satellites.
Consequently, the nation buys images from the UK after it had provided for it in the satellite contract.
It was further gathered that the authorities at NASRDA had requested
for funding in the 2012 financial year in order to correct this anomaly.
It was learnt that the President of the Senate, Senator David Mark,
had asked NASRDA to produce images of Otukpo, his constituency in Benue
State, after he heard of the scandal.
As at press time, Mark had not received any image from NASRDA.
But the NASRDA boss reaction to this was, “There is nothing happening in Otukpo that we are not aware of.”
When our correspondent called the Chief Press Secretary to the Senate
President, Mr. Paul Mumeh, to confirm the directive from Mark, he said
he would confirm from his boss and report his findings.
He was yet to do so as at press time. Subsequent calls to his mobile phone were not picked.
At the image exhibition in Abuja on Friday, Mohammed said the
in-orbit commissioning of the satellites was completed in September 2011
in collaboration with SSTL, adding that operations had since been
transferred to Abuja.
According to him, images downlinks to Abuja have been on since
October 2o01, while the spacecrafts have been functioning optimally.
At the ceremony on Friday, 87 telescopes )named Galileoscrope) were
presented by the agency to universities and secondary schools across the
country to help them in the study of space sciences.
The beneficiaries included 72 public universities across the country;
10 best secondary schools determined by West African Examination
Council and five best schools in the Federal Capital Territorya.
“These kits represent an important additional support to the
educational activities in developing countries such as ours. It is
expected that this act of distribution of the Galileoscope will empower
astronomy education in Nigeria.”
Director of Research and Innovation at the National Universities
Commission, Prof. Valentine Ekechukwu, who received the telescopes for
the universities on behalf the NUC Executive Secretary, Prof. Julius
Okogie, expressed gratitude for the donation.
He said that NASRDA could work in collaboration with the Independent
National Electoral Commission for constituency delineation as well as
with the National Population Commission for census purposes.
No comments:
Post a Comment