The suspense must have been suffocating as the countdown began at the Guiana Space Centre on the evening of April 22, 2011. Mere weeks before, the team had been preparing for the same launch when on the last seconds of the countdown, an abnormality was detected on the rocket launcher. The lift-off had to be cancelled. The Ariane 5 ECA rocket was wheeled back into the spaceport’s assembly building and an actuator was replaced before the rocket was approved for a second attempt.
This time, however, there would be no hiccups. The countdown progressed steadily and, at its conclusion, those behind screen in the control room were temporarily blinded by the rocket’s flames and within seconds it had begun its fight.
The UAE’s Yahsat had launched its first commercial telecoms satellite. Yahsat, or Al Yah Satellite Communications Co, is owned by Mubadala Development, a strategic investment company controlled by the Abu Dhabi government. Its first satellite would provide TV and broadband internet to more than 20 countries in Africa, Asia and the Middle East.
The launch marked "a significant step forward for Abu Dhabi's economic diversification and growth”, Jassem al Zaabi, Yahsat's chief executive at the time, told The National.
“We were anxious because of last time but we know that everything must be aligned and work perfectly, and so with the great weather and engines running smoothly, we were extremely happy and proud to watch the satellite take off after more than four years worth of work towards this,” he said. "It was a great moment.”
The Y1A satellite was the first of several Yahsat launched. The move was part of a Dh4.4 billion ($1.2 billion) investment, and marked a major step in the UAE’s aim to diversify its economy and become a regional hub in technology and communications.