The Dnepr was based on the
R-36MUTTH Intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM)called the
SS-18 Satan by NATOdesigned in the 1970s by the
Yuzhnoe Design Bureau in
Dnepropetrovsk,
Ukrainian SSR. Among the outstanding authors of the project were people like
Boris Gubanov and
Sergey Sopov. The Dnepr control system was developed and produced by the
JSC "Khartron",
Kharkiv. The Dnepr was a
three-stage rocket using storable
hypergolic liquid propellants. The launch vehicles used for satellite launches have been withdrawn from ballistic missile service with the
Russian Strategic Rocket Forces and stored for commercial use. A group of a total of 150 ICBMs were allowed under certain geopolitical disarmament protocols to be converted for use, and can be launched through 2020. The Dnepr was launched from the Russian-controlled
Baikonur cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan and the
Dombarovsky launch base, near Yasny, in the Orenburg region of Russia. In February 2015, following a year of strained relations including the
Euromaidan and the
Russo-Ukrainian war, Russia announced that it would sever its "joint program with Ukraine to launch Dnepr rockets and [was] no longer interested in buying Ukrainian
Zenit boosters, deepening problems for [Ukraine's] space program and its struggling
Yuzhmash factory." However
ISC Kosmotras reported that they would continue to fulfill their obligations for three Dnepr launches in 2015, of which only one took place. By the end of 2016, no further launch had materialized and the remaining customers had switched to alternative launch providers. Business magnate
Elon Musk tried to purchase refurbished Dnepr rockets for a low price from Russia but returned empty-handed after failing to find any that he felt were affordable. This led him to the creation of his own private rocket launch company, now known as
SpaceX. == Performance ==