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Nova Scotia grants 18-month extension for work to begin on commercial spaceport

Stephen Matier, left, president of Maritime Launch Services talks with reporters at a meeting of the proposed Spaceport project team in Dartmouth, N.S. on Monday, Dec. 11, 2017. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Andrew Vaughan

Nova Scotia’s Environment Department has granted an 18-month extension for construction to begin on Canada’s first spaceport.

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The department confirms in an email that Maritime Launch Services asked for the extension on Feb. 1 and the request was granted by Environment Minister Keith Irving on Monday.

READ MORE: Nova Scotia spaceport teams with U.S. firm to examine reuse of rockets in space

The province had set a deadline for construction to begin this June, but the company now has until Dec. 3, 2022 to commence work at a site near Canso, located on the northeastern tip of mainland Nova Scotia.

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Maritime Launch Services, which plans to launch Ukrainian-built Cyclone rockets with varying payloads for low and high Earth orbits, was granted conditional environmental approval for the project in June, 2019.

Company CEO Steve Matier blames the COVID-19 pandemic for delaying progress last year and says work continues to secure financing and survey the proposed launch site.

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Matier says he anticipates construction will begin before the province’s new deadline.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 17, 2021.

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