Russia-owned rocket-maker Khrunichev Center says sanctions won’t slow production

EU sanctions imposed on Russia-owned rocket-maker Khrunichev Center will not slow rocket production, but they will impact customer demand, center chief Alexey Varochko said this week in an interview with the Russian News Agency TASS.

On February 23, the EU passed its 10th round of sanctions on Russia, which put the rocket maker on the list of prohibited entities.

Russian rocket builders

The Khrunichev Center is a Russian-owned launch manufacturer responsible for building the heavy-lift Proton-M and Angara launch vehicles.

While Russia’s Soyuz rocket focuses on transport to LEO, Proton-M and Angara are designed for heavier payloads and GEO bird deployments.

According to Varochko, Khrunichev builds its rockets without using any foreign components. The homegrown supply chain, developed through years of sanction pressures, will likely shield the company from manufacturing disruptions.

“Restrictions aimed at the international space activities of the Russian Federation began long before the tenth package of EU sanctions,” Varochko said. “The 10th EU sanctions package added the Khrunichev Center to the list of sanctioned companies, which basically did not change anything.”

Demand wanes

Khrunichev Center is feeling the sting of customers walking away from Russian launch contracts due to the recent sanctions.

“Probably, some of our foreign partners may be afraid of the emergence of so-called secondary sanctions from the EU countries because of business ties with us,” said Varochko.

One such example is South Korea, which pulled out of a contract with Moscow earlier this year after a yearslong launch relationship. “Our plans to launch a multipurpose satellite with Russia have entirely gone awry,” South Korea’s Tae-Seog said.

More from the TASS interview

Varochko reiterated the wind down of Proton-M production to prioritize the next-gen Angara rockets.

Russia is developing a partially reusable Angara rocket, but there is no evidence of significant progress made on the project.


This story originally appeared on Payload and is republished here with permission.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90879690/khrunichev-center-says-sanctions-wont-slow-production?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Utworzony 2y | 12 kwi 2023, 08:20:50


Zaloguj się, aby dodać komentarz

Inne posty w tej grupie

Five truths about being a female founder in 2025

Rarely has Silicon Valley experienced a more profound period of transformation than it has in the past handful of years. The big VC boom of 2020–2021. The great VC hangover starting in 2022. The g

8 lip 2025, 10:40:05 | Fast company - tech
YouTube to Hollywood: We are going to eat you

A YouTube executive needed only 27 minutes to make the case that the company is taking over all aspects of how people create and consume video online.

That was the length of a recent tal

8 lip 2025, 10:40:04 | Fast company - tech
How AI is advancing even faster than sci-fi visionaries imagined

Every time I read about another advance in AI technology, I feel like another figment

8 lip 2025, 08:20:06 | Fast company - tech
This planet is drawing huge flares from its young star

Scientists are tracking a large gas planet experiencing quite a quandary as it orbits extremely close to a young star – a predicament never previously observed.

This exoplanet, as

7 lip 2025, 20:40:06 | Fast company - tech
5 lesser-known Google Pixel phone tricks to make your life a little easier

Journey with me back to the good old days, if you will. There was a time that, when you’d buy a gadget, it’d come with a sometimes verbose but often helpful “instruction manual.”

Not a q

7 lip 2025, 18:30:04 | Fast company - tech
Everything you need to know about Elon Musk’s ‘America Party’

After more than a week of threats, Elon Musk formally launched the America

7 lip 2025, 18:30:02 | Fast company - tech