OHB Sweden Signs Launch
Service Agreement with Rocket Factory Augsburg
March 31st, 2021
OHB Sweden AB, subsidiary
of space and technology group OHB SE, signed a
contract for a dedicated launch with
Germany-based launch service provider, Rocket
Factory Augsburg AG (RFA), for an upcoming
mission scheduled for mid-2024.
“OHB Sweden and Rocket
Factory share a common philosophy to provide the
highest quality and reliability at the lowest
possible prices. OHB Sweden with its extensive
experience of over three decades in the design,
development and testing of low-cost small
satellite missions has found its counterpart in
the launch service market.”, said Benoit
Mathieu, Managing Director at OHB Sweden. “We
are closely following the development activities
of RFA from the very beginning. The team has
shown an impressive track record over the last
two years and we are confident that RFA will
keep this pace for the upcoming milestones. Our
intention with this contract is to secure a
launch slot for one of our commercial customers.
This agreement allows us to be able to offer a
highly integrated and cost-effective solution to
our customers.”
OHB Sweden is a Swedish
provider of space systems and develops, builds,
tests and operates satellites for different
kinds of space missions within communications,
earth observation, space research and
exploration. From low-orbiting satellites via
geostationary ones and all the way up to
interplanetary missions. The company recently
sealed the Arctic Weather Satellite (AWS) with
ESA as the prime contractor, marking the
beginning of OHB Sweden’s future towards small
satellite constellations.
Rocket Factory, a start-up
backed by the German satellite maker OHB as a
strategic investor and Venture Capital firm
Apollo Capital Partners, is currently developing
a launcher system called RFA One for small
satellites with a payload performance of up to
1300kg to low earth orbit (LEO). The first
launch is scheduled for the end of 2022. The
company recently qualified the upper stage tank
system during cryogenic tests and currently is
running a test campaign to hot-fire the main
engine in Esrange, Sweden.
“Signing on with your first
commercial customer is always something
special,” said Jörn Spurmann, Chief Commercial
Officer at RFA. “We are particularly proud that
OHB Sweden selected our highly competitive
launch service, which is a great demonstration
that we achieve traction in the commercial
market. Specifically, since OHB Sweden is at the
forefront of NewSpace, with the quick turnaround
time on the GMS-T mission launched in January,
we believe that this will be the starting point
of a great partnership.”
Dr Stefan Brieschenk, Chief
Operating Officer at RFA, added, “We are truly
excited to provide the outstanding capabilities
of the RFA ONE launch service to OHB Sweden.
This marks a major milestone for future European
access to space in a new environment that allows
for commercial solutions that are highly
cost-effective with a strong customer focus. The
orbital stage of the RFA ONE vehicle can
position the payloads precisely where the
customer wants them to go, while providing a new
dimension of flexibility that traditional launch
services and solutions do not cover.”
RFA is at the forefront of
the global new-space launch vehicle development,
with its state-of-the-art staged-combustion
engine technology. This high-performance engine
technology, coupled to lowest-possible-cost
production techniques, is essentially new to
Europe, and through the support of OHB, RFA
managed to acquire key technologies and key
talent that will propel the business case of the
RFA One launch vehicle to allow it to compete on
a global scale. Recent firing tests have
demonstrated that RFA is on a winning path to
resolve Europe’s most efficient and most
powerful rocket engine technology. Recently, RFA
won the first round of the German micro-launcher
competition of the German Space Agency DLR,
which granted RFA with a letter of support to
receive 500.000 € of funding within ESA’s Boost!
programme. In the next round of the competition,
DLR and ESA will award a launch contract worth
11.000.000 € for institutional payloads.