Astrium wins ESA
contracts to design Ariane 6 and continue development of Ariane 5 ME
30
January 2013
The European Space Agency
(ESA) has awarded Astrium, Europe’s leading space technology
company, €108 million worth of prime contractor agreements covering
the development of the Ariane 6 and Ariane 5 ME launchers. The
contracts follow on from the decisions reached at the ESA
Ministerial Council meeting in Naples on 20-21 November 2012.
Under these contracts,
Astrium will launch the initial definition and feasibility studies
for the future Ariane 6 European launcher. Expected to run for six
months, the study phase aims to identify the concept and
architecture for Ariane 6 and will set out the new launcher’s main
specifications prior to its industrial development.
An outline of Ariane 6’s
design has already been established: it will be a modular rocket
with a payload capacity of 3 to 6.5 metric tons in geostationary
orbit. Dubbed PPH, the launcher’s configuration comprises two lower
stages in which solid propellant is used and a cryogenic upper stage
powered by a Vinci® restartable engine, developed by Snecma (Safran
Group). The task now facing Astrium is to study the various possible
PPH configurations and propose the best solution for meeting the
programme’s technical and scheduling objectives, while also keeping
to the target budget (€70 million per launch) and achieving the same
reliability as Ariane 5.
Together with its industrial
partners, Astrium will also continue development of Ariane 5 ME
(Midlife Evolution), the modernised version of Ariane 5, which will
boost launch capacity by 20% compared to the existing launcher and
for the same price, meaning costs are reduced by 20% per kilogram.
At their Naples meeting, ministers from ESA member states confirmed
its development with a view to a maiden flight scheduled for 2017 or
2018. Astrium must now adapt the programme in line with the
decisions taken by the Ministerial Council, a process that will
involve taking the synergies with the Ariane 6 programme into
consideration, and working towards the earliest possible date for
its entry into service.
This will allow Astrium to
organise the development of the elements that Ariane 5 ME and Ariane
6 have in common, including the Vinci® restartable engine for the
upper stage of both launchers, and to identify all possible
synergies between the two programmes.
“The European Space Agency
has renewed its faith in us as prime contractor by signing these
contracts to deliver on the decisions reached at the ESA Ministerial
Council meeting in Naples,” said Alain Charmeau, CEO of Astrium
Space Transportation. “The studies for the industrial development of
Ariane 6 will pave the way for this truly next generation launcher.
Manufacturing of Ariane 5 ME will begin immediately, and with more
than three years work already completed by us we are on target for
the first flight in five years’ time.”
The prime contractor of the
Ariane 5 European launcher since 2003, Astrium oversees an
industrial network comprising more than 550 companies (over 20% of
them SMEs) in 12 European countries. Thanks to the expertise the
company has acquired and the investments it has made in this near 10
year period, Ariane 5 has become the most reliable commercial
launcher on the global market and has increased its geostationary
orbit payload capacity by nearly one metric ton.