Intelsat Chooses SWISSto12
to Build Intelsat 45
November 07, 2022
Intelsat announced that
scale-up manufacturer SWISSto12 will produce the
Intelsat 45 satellite (IS-45). With the order,
Intelsat becomes the first commercial customer for
the innovative HummingSat geostationary (GEO)
telecommunications product.
Scheduled for launch in 2025,
Intelsat 45 will provide Ku-band fixed-satellite
services enabling Intelsat to provide specialized
and efficient service to Media and Network
customers.
“The SWISSto12 product brings
two innovations to meet our business needs,” said
Jean-Luc Froeliger, SVP of Space Systems, Intelsat.
“The small size addresses a gap in our fleet
strategy, enabling us to be increasingly more
targeted to meet specific customer requirements. In
addition, the additive-manufacturing process used
for this spacecraft is paving the way for faster
satellite build cycles in the future. We are
confident in the HummingSat technology and want to
support the success of new players in the field of
commercial communication satellites.”
HummingSats are just over one
cubic meter in volume, one-tenth the size of
conventional satellites placed in geostationary
orbit. SWISSto12 is developing the satellites in
collaboration with the European Space Agency (ESA)
through its public-private-partnership program. Each
HummingSat is designed to launch as a rideshare
mission on a rocket carrying one or more large
spacecraft to GEO transfer orbit. The new satellite
product line recently passed its system requirements
review, assessed by a panel of ESA experts.
Dr. Emile de Rijk, SWISSto12
founder and CEO: “The award of the IS-45 program by
Intelsat is a landmark moment for SWISSto12. We are
humbled to embark on this journey with Intelsat, who
are the foundational architects of satellite
communications. It is unprecedented for a specialist
high growth scale-up to secure a contract of this
depth with a leading telecommunications operator. It
provides a solid start to our HummingSat product
line to open a new chapter in the satellite
communications industry.”
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