Korea Aerospace Research Institute

The Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI; Korean: 한국항공우주연구원; Hanja: 韓國航空宇宙研究院; RR: Hanguk Hanggong Uju Yeonguweon), established in 1989, is the aeronautics and space agency of South Korea. Its main laboratories are located in Daejeon, in the Daedeok Science Town. KARI's vision is to continue building upon indigenous launch capabilities, strengthen national safety and public service, industrialize satellite information and applications technology, explore the Moon, and develop environmentally-friendly and highly-efficient cutting-edge aircraft and core aerospace technology. Current projects include the KSLV-2 launcher. Past projects include the 1999 Arirang-1 satellite. The agency was founded in 1989. Prior to South Korea's entry into the Institute for Advanced Engineering (IAE) in 1992, it focused primarily on aerospace technology.

Korea Aerospace Research Institute
한국항공우주연구원
Headquarters of the Korea Aerospace Research Institute in Daedeok Innopolis
Agency overview
AbbreviationKARI
Formed10 October 1989 (1989-10-10)
TypeSpace agency
HeadquartersDaejeon, South Korea
MottoAerius Spatium
AdministratorLee Sang-Ryool
Primary spaceportNaro Space Center
OwnerNational Research Council of Science & Technology
Annual budget615 billion
(US$553.1 million)
(FY2021)
WebsiteOfficial KARI website in English
Official KARI website in Korean
Korea Aerospace Research Institute
Hangul
한국항공우주연구원
Hanja
韓國航空宇宙研究院
Revised RomanizationHanguk Hanggong Uju Yeonguweon
McCune–ReischauerHan'guk Hanggong Uju Yŏn'guwŏn
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