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York
Space Systems Acquires Orbion Space
Technology, Further Strengthening Supply
Chain with Flight-Proven Spacecraft
Capability
York Space Systems
has acquired Orbion Space Technology
(Orbion), a Michigan-based manufacturer
of flight-proven electric propulsion
systems. The acquisition strengthens
York’s integrated space ecosystem and
directly supports the strategy the
company outlined at the time of its
initial public offering: aligning its
technology roadmap, investing in
domestic production capacity, and
delivering systems that work reliably
and at scale.
Founded in 2016,
Orbion designs and manufactures
Hall-effect electric thrusters for
constellation-scale satellite missions.
Its Aurora propulsion systems are
produced domestically and are already
flying on York-built spacecraft
supporting U.S. national security
missions, including satellites operating
as part of fielded military
constellations.
“Orbion’s
propulsion systems have already
demonstrated reliable, repeatable
performance on York spacecraft
supporting operational missions,” said
Michael Lajczok, CTO of York.
“Integrating this capability allows us
to more tightly align propulsion with
spacecraft design and mission operations
strengthening system-level performance
while strengthening performance and
long-term reliability as mission demands
grow.”
“Orbion was built
to deliver propulsion systems designed
to perform reliably on orbit and to
produce them in a factory that can meet
the scale demands of prolific
constellations,” said Brad King,
co-founder and CEO of Orbion. “Our work
with York has demonstrated what’s
possible when propulsion is designed
alongside the spacecraft and mission
from the start. Joining York allows us
to accelerate that approach and support
the growing number of missions already
being executed today.”
By aligning the
technology roadmap, York’s Orbion
acquisition reduces supply-chain risk of
an historically scarce spacecraft
subsystem, which improves schedule
certainty and enhances its ability to
deliver tightly integrated spacecraft
platforms optimized for both current and
next-generation mission requirements.
“This acquisition
builds on an established, on-orbit
relationship,” said Dirk Wallinger,
founder and CEO of York. “Orbion
propulsion is already operating
successfully on York spacecraft today.
This next step allows us to more closely
align Orbion’s leading-edge technologies
with the growing constellation-scale
demands across the sector, expand
production planning to meet strong
market demand, and support customers
across the full space ecosystem.”
Orbion will
continue to operate as a wholly owned
U.S. subsidiary of York, serving
customers across the broader space
industry. The combination provides a
clear path to expanding Orbion’s
production capacity in support of
growing commercial and national security
satellite demand.
The transaction
follows York’s recent acquisition of
ATLAS Space Operations, reinforcing a
deliberate strategy to integrate
critical mission capabilities across
York’s space ecosystem, propulsion,
ground operations, and end-to-end
mission execution. Together, these
acquisitions advance York’s long-term
vision of delivering complete space
mission solutions supported by a solid,
secure, and robust U.S. supply chain.
“From propulsion to
ground systems, we are deliberately
strengthening the core capabilities that
underpin mission success,” Wallinger
added. “This is what we said we would do
as a public company — invest in proven
technologies, scale responsibly, and
continue delivering operational
capability on orbit.”
Today, York is
executing at scale across national
security and commercial missions, with
more than 30 satellites currently on
orbit, mission operations centers
supporting five active missions, and two
operational constellations. The company
is preparing for its eighth launch
overall, executing on its twelfth
contract, and advancing work on its
sixth constellation contract,
underscoring York’s ability to deliver
repeated, reliable performance across
multiple programs while continuing to
scale production and mission execution
capacity.
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