Rocket Lab Closes
Acquisition of Space Solar Power Products Company
SolAero Holdings, Inc.
January 18, 2022
Rocket Lab USA, Inc. has closed
the previously-announced transaction to acquire
SolAero Holdings, Inc. (SolAero), a premier supplier
of space solar power products and precision
aerospace structures for the global aerospace
market, for $80 million in cash. Rocket Lab
announced the execution of the agreement to acquire
SolAero on December 13, 2021 pending certain closing
conditions.
The acquisition aligns with
Rocket Lab’s growth strategy of vertical integration
to deliver a comprehensive space solution that spans
spacecraft manufacture, satellite subsystems, flight
software, ground operations, and launch. As one of
only two companies producing high-efficiency,
space-grade solar cells in the United States,
SolAero’s space solar cells are among the highest
performing in the world and support civil space
exploration, science, defense and intelligence, and
commercial markets. In combining with Rocket Lab,
SolAero will tap into the Company’s resources and
manufacturing capability to boost high-volume
production, making high-performing space power
technologies available at scale.
“SolAero has established itself
as a premier provider of solar technologies and we
are very excited to be joining forces,” said Rocket
Lab founder and CEO, Peter Beck. “SolAero is a
highly complementary addition to Rocket Lab’s
vertically integrated business model, enabling us to
deliver complete space mission solutions for our
customers. With more than 1,000 successful missions
under their belt, the team at SolAero have enabled
trailblazing missions, providing space solar power
solutions for the James Webb Space Telescope, and
missions on Mars including InSight and Ingenuity. We
are thrilled to be combining our innovative teams,
industry-leading technologies, and strong resources
to enable our customers to achieve incredible things
in space.”
“We are very excited to join
the outstanding team at Rocket Lab and contribute to
their track record of innovation and on-orbit
success,” said SolAero President and CEO, Brad
Clevenger. “We look forward to becoming an integral
part of Rocket Lab’s Space Systems business while
continuing to offer all of our customers premier
capability and value.”
Founded in 1998 and
headquartered in Albuquerque, New Mexico, SolAero’s
solar cells, solar panels, and composite structural
products have supported more than 1,000 successful
space missions with 100% reliability and mission
success to date. Over the past two decades,
SolAero’s products have played key roles in some of
the industry’s most ambitious space missions,
including supplying power to NASA’s Parker Solar
Probe and Mars Insight Lander, the largest solar
array ever deployed on the surface of Mars, and
several Cygnus Cargo Resupply Missions to the
International Space Station. SolAero also led the
development and manufacturing of the solar panel on
Ingenuity, the helicopter that successfully flew on
Mars in April this year, marking the first ever
powered, controlled flight on a planet other than
Earth.
SolAero technology has also
made commercial constellations possible, providing
power to OneWeb’s broadband constellation. Most
recently, SolAero has been selected to supply Solar
Power Modules for the Power and Propulsion Element
of NASA’s Gateway as part of NASA’s Artemis lunar
exploration plans, which will enable future missions
to Mars.
The addition of SolAero’s
425-strong team brings Rocket Lab’s total headcount
to more than 1,100 employees across its space
manufacturing complexes, test facilities, and launch
sites in California, Virginia, Colorado, Maryland,
Toronto, New Zealand and now Albuquerque, New
Mexico. The SolAero team will continue to be led by
President and CEO Brad Clevenger at SolAero’s
154,696 ft² (14,372 m²) production facilities in
Albuquerque, New Mexico.
The SolAero merger follows on
from the acquisition of space software company ASI
Aerospace LLC in October 2021, spacecraft separation
systems company Planetary Systems Corporation in
December 2021, and satellite components manufacturer
Sinclair Interplanetary in April 2020.