The European Space Agency
(ESA) has awarded Orbex €7.45 million through
its Boost! Commercial Space Transportation
Services and Support (C-STS) programme, designed
to support commercially sustainable space
transportation services in Europe.
The Boost! contract was
awarded to Orbex following an in-depth
evaluation process, assessing Orbex’s commercial
strategy, financial stability and technical
progress. This is the largest award made to date
by the programme. Orbex will supplement the
funding with an additional €4.7 million in
matching private investment.
The Boost! programme was
adopted at Space19+, ESA’s Council Meeting at
Ministerial Level with the aim of supporting the
European space transportation industry to
improve competitiveness and stimulate
innovation, in light of evolving commercial
demand. ESA is an intergovernmental
organisation, created in 1975, with the mission
of shaping the development of Europe’s space
capability and ensuring that investment in space
delivers benefits to the citizens of Europe and
the world. It currently has 22 Member States.
The funds from the award
will go towards the completion of spaceflight
systems in preparation for the first launches of
Orbex’s 19-metre ‘microlauncher’ rocket, Prime.
€11.25 million of the total funding will be
assigned to work undertaken in the UK, in
particular the lightweight avionics designed
in-house by Orbex in Forres, and the guidance,
navigation and control (GNC) software subsystem
being designed by Elecnor Deimos, a strategic
investor and partner of Orbex. The remaining
€900,000 of the total funding package will
support the development of the GNC for the
orbital phase being developed by Elecnor Deimos
for Orbex in Portugal.
The Boost! funding will
support the creation of a significant number of
new jobs in the UK, in particular at the Orbex
headquarters in Forres, Scotland. As Orbex
prepares for its first UK Pathfinder launch, the
company has ramped up its recruitment efforts,
most recently hiring a new Head of GNC with
experience from several European spaceflight
programmes.
Orbex has already signed
six commercial customers for satellite launches,
with the first launch expected in 2022 from
Orbex’s carbon-neutral home spaceport, Space Hub
Sutherland on the A’Mhoine peninsula in
Scotland. Planning permission for the spaceport
was granted in August 2020, with construction
expected to begin in 2021. Space Hub Sutherland
is currently the only vertical launch spaceport
in the UK that has received planning permission.
“During the evaluation
process that preceded this award, we examined
Orbex’s service proposal in detail and developed
an appreciation for the underlying technical
concept as well as the entrepreneurial and
commercial approach,” said Thilo Kranz,
Commercial Space Transportation Programme
Manager at the European Space Agency. “There is
excitement and momentum in European spaceflight
and privately led initiatives, like the one from
Orbex, are going to be a critical component of
the long-term success of the European space
industry.”
“We very much appreciate
the investment in new, commercially-focused
microlauncher technologies from ESA’s new Boost!
programme,” said Chris Larmour, CEO of Orbex.
“And we’re especially grateful for the strong
support we received from the UK Space Agency and
the Portuguese Space Agency, PT Space. Orbex´s
environmentally sustainable microlaunchers will
soon be launching for the first time from the
UK, and ESA’s recognition of the commercial and
scientific opportunities this brings to Europe
is significant.”
Uniquely for a commercial
rocket, Prime is fueled by bio-propane, a
clean-burning, renewable fuel which reduces CO2
emissions by 90% compared to kerosene-based
fuels, and creates no atmospheric black carbon.
The Prime rocket was designed to be re-usable,
incorporating a novel recovery and reusability
system. The rocket has also been designed to
leave zero debris in orbit around the Earth.
Orbex announced in December
2020 that it had secured $24 million in a
funding round led by BGF, the UK's most active
investment company, and Octopus Ventures, one of
the largest VCs in Europe. In February 2020, the
company also announced that it had commissioned
the largest industrial 3D printer in Europe,
capable of printing 35 rocket engines per year.