BlackSky Increases
Capacity as Latest Satellite Enters Commercial
Operations
April 19, 2021
BlackSky recently announced
a planned business combination with Osprey
Technology Acquisition Corp. shared that its
BlackSky 7 satellite completed the commissioning
process and entered full commercial operations
within two weeks of launch. This latest
satellite was launched at 22:30 UTC on March 22,
2021, delivered first insights and began limited
commercial operations less than 24 hours later.
Further, the company today revealed two
additional BlackSky satellites have been shipped
to a launch facility in New Zealand for its next
planned launch mission with Rocket Lab named
“Running out of Toes” scheduled for May 2021.
BlackSky’s enhanced
commissioning capabilities showcase advanced
levels of automation and asynchronous system
evaluations that allow rapid integration of new
satellites into its constellation. These
features streamline the company’s ability to
rapidly grow the space sensor network and extend
capacity to deliver real-time intelligence with
average one-hour, dawn-to-dusk imaging revisit
rates and average 90-minute delivery times.
“With our latest launch,
our customers are witnessing how we have built
the infrastructure for delivering on-demand
geospatial intelligence capacity,” said Brian E.
O’Toole, CEO of BlackSky. “These investments in
our delivery infrastructure enable customers to
access real-time situational awareness, and
ensure they have access to first-to-know
insights about the things that matter most to
them.”
BlackSky previously
announced launch plans with Rocket Lab to deploy
eight additional satellites in 2021. The company
expects to have 14 satellites on orbit by the
close of the year. BlackSky seeks to build its
constellation to 30 high-resolution
multi-spectral satellites capable of monitoring
the most important locations on Earth every 30
minutes, day or night.