UK Space Agency funds de-orbit scheme for OneWeb
July 24, 2024
Japan’s Astroscale’s UK subsidiary has received around $15 million (€17.8m) from the UK Space Agency and the European Space Agency to de-orbit a dead OneWeb satellite.
The funding goes into ELSA-M, or End of Life Services mission, and is scheduled for 2026. The new cash comes on top of an €18 million grant which covered the first three phases.
The mission’s Phase Four schedule handles the assembly, integration and testing of an ELSA-M satellite which nis built with a capture mechanism comprising a magnetic docking plate already in place on most of the Eutelsat-owned OneWeb fleet.
OneWeb has more than 600 satellites in low Earth orbit. Astroscale’s UK MD Nick Shave said ELSA-M confirmed that it would remove a OneWeb satellite already in orbit that is no longer in service.
The ELSA-M scheme is potentially capable of handling more than one target satellite, and is designed to cope with satellites up to 800 kgs in size, which ELSA-M would then deorbit.
Other posts by :
- SES warns of risks for airlines adopting Starlink
- Starlink facing backlash in South Africa
- China wants 200,000 satellites
- Bank raises view on AST to $100
- Frost & Sullivan cites Hughes as #1
- Verizon cutting prices
- ScotiaBank confuses market over AST SpaceMobile
- EchoStar gains bank support
- SpaceX complains to FCC over AST SpaceMobile
