Guiana Space Centre

Guiana Space Centre
Centre spatial guyanais

Panoramic view of Guiana Space Centre
Agency overview
Formed14 April 1964 (1964-04-14)
JurisdictionGovernment of France
HeadquartersKourou, French Guiana
Employees1,700 direct (2020)
7,500 indirect (2011)
Agency executive
  • Philippe Lier, Director
Parent agencyESA / EUSPA / CNES
Websitecentrespatialguyanais.cnes.fr
Map
Map of Guiana Space Centre
Detailed map
Guiana Space Centre
Coordinates5°10′08″N 52°41′25″W / 5.169°N 52.6903°W / 5.169; -52.6903
OperatorArianespace, ESA
Total launches325
Launch pad(s)7
Launch history
StatusActive
First launch10 March 1970
ELFS launch history
StatusInactive
Launches412
First launch1968
Last launch1981
Associated
rockets
Sounding rockets
ALD/ELM launch history
StatusInactive
Launches8
First launch10 March 1970
Diamant B (Mika / Wika)
Last launch27 September 1975
Diamant BP4 (Aura)
Associated
rockets
ELA-1 / ELV launch history
StatusActive
Launches52
First launch5 November 1971
Europa II (STV 4)
Last launch29 April 2025
Vega C (BIOMASS)
Associated
rockets
ELA-2 launch history
StatusInactive
Launches119
First launch28 March 1986
Ariane 3 (GStar-2)
Last launch15 February 2003
Ariane 4 (Intelsat 907)
Associated
rockets
ELA-3 launch history
StatusInactive
Launches117
First launch4 June 1996
Ariane 5 (Cluster)
Last launch5 July 2023
Ariane 5 (Syracuse 4B / Heinrich Hertz)
Associated
rockets
ELS launch history
StatusInactive
Launches27
First launch21 October 2011
Soyuz ST-B (Galileo)
Last launch10 February 2022
Soyuz ST-B (OneWeb L13)
Associated
rockets
ELA-4 launch history
StatusActive
Launches2
First launch9 July 2024
Ariane 6 (multiple payloads)
Last launch6 March 2025
Ariane 6 (CSO-3)
Associated
rockets

The Guiana Space Centre (French: Centre spatial guyanais; CSG), also called Europe's Spaceport, is a spaceport to the northwest of Kourou in French Guiana, an overseas region of France in South America. Kourou is located approximately 500 kilometres (310 mi; 270 nmi) north of the equator at a latitude of 5°. In operation since 1968, it is a suitable location for a spaceport because of its near equatorial location and open sea to the east and north.

At CSG, space launches are conducted by several European private companies and government agencies working together. The CSG land itself is managed by CNES, the French national space agency. The launch infrastructure built on the CSG land is owned by the European Space Agency. The private company Arianespace operates the launches including planning missions, handling customer relationships and overseeing the team at CSG that integrates and prepares vehicles for launch. The rockets themselves are designed and produced by other companies, ArianeGroup for the Ariane 6 and Avio for the Vega.