ELA relocates its
spaceport from the Northern Territory to Queensland.
Equatorial Launch Australia (ELA)
announced the decision to immediately cease operations
of the Arnhem Space Centre in the Northern Territory and
relocate the spaceport to a new site in Queensland.
This decision has been forced by
the inability of the Company to finalise a lease for the
expansion of the Arnhem Space Centre. The lease approval
process had been in progress formally for just under
three years (formal application on 1 January 2022).
The decision came after the
Northern Land Council (NLC) failed to meet its own
specified deadline for the approval of the Head Lease
for the fourth time over the last 12 months in October
2024.
Despite desperate appeals from ELA,
the Northern Territory Chief Minister’s Department, and
the Gumatj Corporation since February 2024, the NLC
would not issue a Head Lease or provide any official
reasons for the delays.
The Gumatj are ELA’s direct
landlord for the existing site and are the traditional
owners and operators of the adjacent and disused bauxite
mine on the Gove Peninsula, the site that ELA had
requested for the spaceport expansion.
The continued delays from the NLC
have made the existence of the spaceport in the Northern
Territory challenging, and the most recent delay to late
2025 to allow consultation with traditional owner groups
had the potential to put ELA in breach of its
contractual obligations with launch clients and
jeopardized a previously secured major funding round.
Accordingly, Management and the
Board of ELA were left with no option other than to act
in the best interest of its customers and shareholders
and abandon negotiations to seek an alternate equatorial
site in Queensland.
Working with the Queensland
Government, ELA has identified a potential alternate
site and has commenced planning and regulatory
clearances for its contracted launches in Q3 2025. The
new site, named the ‘Australian Space Centre Cape
York™’, will be at Weipa in Queensland. More information
about this new site will be released in coming days.
ELA is saddened that the more than
$100m investment that ELA was making in the East Arnhem
region, and the projected $3.6bn in direct economic
stimulus, local job creation, and support for local and
regional students in STEM projects, as well as the
long-term opportunities that were forecast over the life
of the proposed lease, will now no longer materialize.
ELA would like to thank the
unrelenting support of the Northern Territory Government
and the Gumatj Corporation, who have both been exemplary
partners in the spaceport’s eight-year existence and
throughout this difficult process.
|