
Namibia has taken over full operation of the China-Aided Satellite Ground Data Receiving Station (SGDRS), gaining its own platform for gathering and processing satellite data. The station now falls fully under Namibian control, giving the country direct access to satellite information used for government planning, scientific work and environmental monitoring. Officials from the Ministry of Education, Innovation, Youth, Sports, Arts and Culture (MEIYSAC) joined China’s Embassy in Windhoek for the signing ceremony, where Dr. Lisho Mundia and China’s Ambassador Zhao Weiping signed the Handover and Takeover Certificate and transferred full responsibility for the station to Namibia.
The SGDRS includes a satellite-tracking antenna, a reception system, a data-processing centre and hands on technical training for Namibian specialists. With these systems operating locally, Namibian teams can receive, decode and interpret satellite images without turning to external facilities.
Sector Uses Across the Country
Government officials say the station supports work such as monitoring grazing land, forests and water bodies, planning crop cycles, tracking drought signals, analysing weather shifts, guiding emergency responses, identifying poaching hotspots and strengthening wildlife surveillance. The facility also helps Namibia grow its own expertise in geospatial analysis, engineering and remote-sensing operations.
Namibia continues to update its rules for space-related work. Cabinet approved the drafting of a Space Science and Technology Bill to set clear procedures for licensing, data handling and operational responsibilities. The National Commission for Research, Science and Technology revived the National Space Science Council to bring together specialists in astronomy, engineering, GIS, ICT and law to advise on national space activities.
A Core Tool for Satellite-Based Research
With the SGDRS operating under Namibian control, the country now relies on its own facility for high-resolution satellite data used in land mapping, weather observation, environmental analysis and security monitoring. Officials say the station supports a wide range of scientific and technical projects and helps build stronger local capacity in satellite-based observation and remote sensing.
