The King of Sweden Carl XVI Gustaf and the President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen are due to inaugurate this new extension of the lost site in Jukkasjärvi, in the far north of Sweden, on Friday.

Not a cat on the horizon, only a few reindeer on transhumance in the summer: the forest desert that covers the region explains why the space base is installed at this location, at the foot of the "Radar hill", 200 kilometers above the polar circle.

Created by the European Space Agency (ESA) in 1966 to study the Earth's atmosphere and the aurora borealis, the site has invested heavily in recent years to provide facilities capable of sending satellites.

In a vast new hangar capable of housing the assembly of two thirty-meter rockets, Philip Påhlsson, head of the "Nouveau Esrange" project, operates a large lifting door.

Under the rosy twilight of this early afternoon, we can then see, outside, the three new firing points.

A big step

"It is from here that the firing of satellites will take place" in the coming year, underlines Mr. Påhlsson.

"It's a major step, the biggest since the creation of Esrange".

Nearly 600 so-called suborbital rockets - including the "Suborbital Express 3" on this freezing day in late November - have already been launched from this corner of the far north of Sweden.

The new hangar suitable for housing the assembly of two rockets of about thirty meters at the Esrange space center, November 21, 2022 in Jukkasjärvi, in northern Sweden © Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP

But with the future first launch of a satellite, the base hopes to join a closed club of big names in the history of space conquest such as Baikonur in Kazakhstan, Kourou in French Guiana or Cape Canaveral in Florida.

From the Portuguese Azores to the island of Andøya in the Norwegian Arctic via Spanish Andalusia or the Shetland Islands, the list of competing European projects continues to grow, all determined to be the first to pull off.

“We think we are clearly the most advanced”, assures the SSC, which aims for a first shot at the end of 2023 or the beginning of 2024.

British billionaire Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit company made its first launch - failed - on Tuesday, but uses a Boeing 747 to send a rocket.

The small German launcher RFA has just chosen the SaxaVord site on the British Shetland Islands, for a launch expected at the end of 2023.

The hangar housing the "Suborbital Express 3" rocket at the Esrange space center on November 21, 2022 in Jukkasjärvi, northern Sweden © Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP

While the Plesetsk base in northwestern Russia carried out a few launches after the end of the Cold War, no other country on the European continent can claim this title.

Why is Europe, so far from the more favorable equator for satellite launches, experiencing such a space boom?

"Satellites are smaller and cheaper, and instead of sending one big one you can split them into several smaller ones, and that drives demand," says Philip Påhlsson.

Never since the dawn of the conquest of space have so many objects been launched into space as in 2021. And new records are expected in the years to come.

Philip Påhlsson, head of the "New Esrange" project, at the Esrange space center, on November 21, 2022 in Jukkasjärvi, in northern Sweden © Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP

A North Pole-South Pole (rather than East-West) orbit suffices for many of them, making sites like Esrange interesting.

Another advantage: being close to European customers avoids the long and costly ship transport of satellites to Kourou.

Ukraine

Here as elsewhere in Europe, we speak for the moment of "micro-launchers".

Rockets of about 30 meters capable of carrying cargoes of a few hundred kilos.

In the longer term, SSC is aiming for launches exceeding one tonne.

Working in the harsh arctic climate "includes a number of challenges", we acknowledge at SSC.

In icy air, particular caution is required, especially when handling metals, which have become more fragile.

A tractor at the construction site of three new launch pads at the Esrange Space Center on November 21, 2022 in Jukkasjärvi, northern Sweden © Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP

But the war in Ukraine - where the European Vega rocket engines are made - and the breakdown of Western space cooperation with Russia have further increased interest in space bases on the Old Continent.

© 2023 AFP