E-SPACE Announces Largest
Space Seed Round Ever To Democratize Space With
Sustainable Satellites And Reduce Orbital Debris
Feb. 7, 2022
E-Space has closed the largest
seed funding round in space technology history with
a $50 million investment led by Prime Movers Lab.
E-Space is pioneering a new
network, with filings in hand for potentially over
one hundred thousand secure communication
satellites, to help businesses and governments
access the power of space to solve problems on
Earth. Created by industry pioneer Greg Wyler, who
previously founded both O3b Networks and OneWeb,
E-Space is enabling a new generation of space-based
communications capabilities. In a world where
satellites are becoming space polluters, the new
E-Space systems have the double bottom line of
sustainability as they will eventually actively and
sacrificially capture and deorbit small debris in
space while performing their function as
communications satellites.
“One of the best ways to
understand and manage Earth is from space,” said
Greg Wyler, founder and chairman of E-Space. “We
designed E-Space to democratize space, to enable the
collection of continuous data about our planet with
real-time information of sensors and devices across
the world to combat climate change, and to upgrade
our electric grids. Importantly, we’ve built
sustainability into everything we do. We are
designing our systems to not only prevent space
debris generation, but to eventually actively reduce
space debris so generations to come will be able to
access the power of space.”
“Greg is an icon of space
innovation with an unparalleled track record of
pushing the industry forward by turning bold ideas
into everyday reality,” said Anton Brevde, Partner
at Prime Movers Lab and E-Space Board Member.
“E-Space is uniquely built to bring the power of
space to any business or government while actively
reducing the existential threat of space debris. The
company already has several advanced conversations
with major customers and is poised to take satellite
mesh networks mainstream.”
Just as Amazon Web Services
enabled a new generation of services across every
industry built on near-infinite low-cost cloud
infrastructure, E-Space will be a foundational
platform to help governments and large companies
build space-based applications in a capital light
manner. E-Space will provide the world’s first
federated systems that can dynamically extend
satellite capacity for a multitude of applications,
ranging from secure communications to managing
remote infrastructure.
Core to this approach is
E-Space’s new generation of satellites that make
space affordable and accessible, enabling custom
networks for companies and governments globally
while providing unparalleled security and
resiliency. E-Space’s novel peer-to-peer satellite
communication model enables real-time command and
control and global insights. Dedicated
constellations ensure sovereignty and eliminate
exposure to foreign entities, using a “Zero Trust”
topology to protect data.
E-Space places sustainability
at the heart of its architecture, building on five
key design tenets to make space safe:
1. Minimize satellite debris on
collision: Satellites should minimize the number of
new debris objects that are generated, with zero
being the ideal goal.
2. Capture and deorbit:
Satellites should be designed to minimize the debris
from objects they hit and capture debris they
contact to prevent further collisions.
3. Fail safe: Satellites should
be designed to fail into a high-drag configuration
where they passively, and quickly, deorbit.
4. 100% demise: Satellites must
fully demise upon re-entry into the Earth’s
atmosphere.
5. Small cross section: Large
cross-section satellites crowd others from space and
will cause collisional cascading and debris
creation. Small cross-sections make satellites much
less vulnerable to collision and LEO constellations
should limit their individual and cumulative
cross-sections. System-wide cross-sections should be
tracked and considered relative to calculations on
total orbital carrying capacity, for individual
altitudes to enable appropriate sharing.
The investment fully funds
E-Space’s “Beta 1” launch of its first test
satellites in March 2022 as well as its second “Beta
2” launch later this year. Mass production is slated
for 2023. The company is composed of two independent
entities based in France (E-Space SAS) and the
United States (E-Space, Inc.).

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