NEC Builds Satellite Assembly Plant Outside
of Tokyo
January 7, 2013
NEC
Corporation is building a new facility for
the assembly, integration and testing of
satellites at its existing plant in Fuchu City,
a suburb of Tokyo. In addition to the
Fuchu plant's existing operations, the new
facility will enable NEC to assemble as many as
eight satellites at any one time.
The new facility will accommodate the
construction of large scale satellites within a
4-story, steel frame structure featuring a total
floor area of 9,900 square meters, including a
large chamber space and a large work room space
with a maximum interior height of 26 meters. The
facility is also being built to withstand
earthquakes up to an intensity of 7 on Japan's
seven-stage seismic scale.
Approximately 9.6 billion yen is being invested
in the new facility, including the building and
its equipment. This investment is partially
subsidized by Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade
and Industry's Innovation Center Establishment
Assistance Program . NEC is investing
approximately 7.6 billion yen.
Construction of the new facility is scheduled to
begin in March 2013. Operations are expected to
begin in June 2014.
NEC has managed the integration of sixty-six
satellites, including Osumi, Japan's first
satellite, which launched in 1970, the Hayabusa
space probe, which successfully returned samples
from the Itokawa asteroid, and the first stage
of the Shizuku water cycle observation
satellite.
Going forward, NEC aims for 100 billion yen in
space-related business by 2020. Starting
in Asia, the company seeks to proactively meet
satellite demand for emerging space programs by
capitalizing on the capabilities of its compact
satellite assembly plant in Sagamihara City,
Kanagawa Prefecture, the new facility in Fuchu,
which will support integrated production systems
for NEC's advanced standard satellite bus, the
"NEXTAR Series" (NEC Next Generation Star) and
the development of satellite infrastructure for
environmental observation and disaster surveys.