Value of Space Economy
reaches $424 billion in 2022 despite new unforeseen
investment concerns
January 09, 2023
The fast growing commercial
space sector enjoyed another year of significant
growth and productivity during 2022, but did not
escape unscathed from rising geopolitical tensions
and operational challenges caused by inflation, high
interest rates and the after-effects of previous
years’ pandemic lockdowns on supply chains,
according to Euroconsult.
The leading global space
consulting and market intelligence firm estimates
that the global space market grew by 8% last year
and is expected to reach over $737B within a decade.
Their newly published Space Economy Report details
the role played by various elements that make up the
industry, with analysis broken down by verticals,
applications and client types that make up the
financial landscape of the sector.
As with previous editions of
the report, the majority of the sector’s value (83%)
is found in space-based end-user applications, an
area of the space economy showing no signs of waning
in the years ahead, covering telecommunications,
Earth observation and companies utilising satellite
navigation to deliver services to their customers.
However, the firm deliberately breaks out the “core”
space sector - organisations that make or own space
assets - as a key focus, estimating activity
throughout the value chain to grow from $70B in 2022
to $100B by 2031 with segments such as
manufacturing, launch services and the ground
segment driving this growth.
AN OVERVIEW OF THE SPACE
ECONOMY IN 2022
One of the most impactful
consequences of the turmoil that impacted worldwide
financial markets last year has been a risk-averse
approach to investment into the space ecosystem.
This point is underlined by Euroconsult’s findings
that investment operations recorded in the last year
have decreased by more than 10% when compared to
2021.
Euroconsult reports that
industry investors are now focusing on
cash-generating companies or early start-ups that
require low levels of capital rather than higher
risk investments into pre-revenue enterprises that
occurred regularly in the preceding years. This has
led to a slowdown of new investment into the sector
and a move towards a more results-oriented approach
in what remains a very competitive and agile market,
with the average investment value dropping
dramatically between 2021 and 2022 from $71M to
$33M.
Conversely, the Space Economy
Report also highlights the more positive financial
implications arising from certain market trends,
including numerous high-value merger and acquisition
occurrences throughout the space value chain and
increased government budgets for space technologies
with more countries joining the sector than ever
before. The public sector has also boosted private
businesses, while planned satellite constellations
have positively impacted the expansion of
manufacturing and other supply chain activities
despite temporary bottlenecks, particularly in the
US and Asia.
The report’s Editor in Chief,
Euroconsult’s Lucas Pleney stated, “The
ramifications of recent global events including the
Covid pandemic and war in Ukraine continue to
unfold, accelerating the transition towards more
CAPEX-efficient, capable solutions in the context of
intense competition and market uncertainty. M&A
activity continues to thrive as the market
demonstrates prevailing signs of consolidation that
we expect to continue in the years ahead.”
The report, known primarily for
its credible financial estimates, has come to set
the industry standard for defining phrases such as
“space market” and “space economy”, concepts that
can often be convoluted due to the wide reach of the
space sector across various verticals, supply chains
and end-user applications, utilizing Euroconsult’s
40 years of trusted, qualified space research.
|