Monday, April 7, 2025

What a trade war means for space

Plus: New launch contracts worth $13.7 billion from Space Force
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04/07/2025

Top Stories

Blue Origin, SpaceX and United Launch Alliance received nearly $13.7 billion in Space Force launch contracts Friday. The companies won National Security Space Launch Phase 3 Lane 2 contracts, a cornerstone initiative designed to bolster the Pentagon's access to space for its most sensitive and risk-averse missions. SpaceX emerged as the leading contractor, securing $5.9 billion in anticipated awards for 28 launches, followed by ULA at nearly $5.4 billion for 19 launches and Blue Origin at nearly $2.4 billion for 7 launches. The awards reflected a shift in Pentagon strategy to bring in a third provider, Blue Origin, to increase competition. Flights under these new contracts are expected to take place from fiscal year 2027 through 2032. [SpaceNews]


A new trade war triggered by major tariffs could impact the space industry. The tariffs announced last week by the Trump administration led to major declines in the stock market, including for space companies. The tariffs will clog supply chains, industry officials said, hiking the costs of semiconductors, electronic components, steel, plastics, resins and specialized fuel. U.S. space executives are eager to find ways to mitigate supply chain disruption and rising costs as they bolster domestic production, but also point to longer-term benefits from bringing more capabilities to the United States, including an accelerated shift toward automation. [SpaceNews]


NASA is reportedly preparing to end some Earth science missions in response to potential severe budget cuts. Speaking at a congressional roundtable Sunday at the Space Symposium, Rep. George Whitesides (D-Calif.) said he learned NASA has instructed Earth science missions either in formulation or in extended operations to prepare termination plans for fiscal year 2026. He added that the agency has not decided yet to terminate any of those missions. It comes amid reports the White House's fiscal year 2026 budget proposal could seek to cut NASA science by as much as 50%. Agency officials said at the National Academies' Space Science Week event last week they did not have details about those budgets, but acknowledged "peak uncertainty" about future budgets. [SpaceNews]


The Missile Defense Agency (MDA) is looking beyond traditional defense contractors for roles in the Golden Dome missile defense system. MDA and U.S. Space Force announced plans to host a conference later this month specifically encouraging participation from commercial firms outside the traditional defense industry to explore space-interception concepts. MDA has a particular interest in ways to destroy missiles in their boost phase. The administration's outreach to non-traditional contractors signals recognition that breakthrough approaches may be necessary to make such a system feasible, both technologically and economically. [SpaceNews]


A private astronaut mission safely returned to Earth Friday. The Crew Dragon spacecraft Resilience splashed down off the coast from Oceanside, California, at 12:19 p.m. Eastern, marking the conclusion of the Fram2 mission. The four-person mission was the first crewed flight to circle the Earth's poles. The crew completed 22 experiments, including exiting the capsule unassisted after recovery to get experience for how crews on future missions to the moon and Mars will be able to leave their spacecraft when there are no recovery teams to assist. The splashdown was the first for a Crew Dragon mission off the California coast, a move made to ensure a safe disposal of the spacecraft's trunk section. [SpaceNews]


NASA is opening the door for private astronaut missions to the International Space Station to be commanded by foreign astronauts. NASA issued a request for proposals for two private astronaut missions, or PAMs, to the ISS, one in mid-2026 and the other in 2027. NASA has required those missions be commanded by a former NASA astronaut with flight experience, a requirement that remains in place in the new solicitation. However, companies can also propose an "alternate" commander who is a former Canadian, European or Japanese astronaut who could then fly the mission if the agency changes its policy. Axiom Space has won all four previous PAMs, but is expected to face competition in this round from Vast. [SpaceNews]


Other News

SpaceX launched more Starlink satellites Saturday night. A Falcon 9 lifted off from Cape Canaveral at 11:07 p.m. Eastern, placing 28 Starlink satellites into orbit. The launch used a booster making its 19th flight, most of which were other Starlink launches. [Spaceflight Now]


A startup pursuing space-based solar power has raised $50 million. Aetherflux announced the Series A round last week led by Index Ventures and Interlagos. Several other funds and individuals also participated. Aetherflux announced plans last year to pursue an alternative approach to space-based solar power, involving a constellation of satellites in low Earth orbit that use lasers to transmit power to the ground. The company said the funding will support work on a demonstration mission in 2026, adding that it has received interest from the Defense Department in its concept. [SpaceNews]


Astra has reportedly raised $80 million since going private last year. Company CEO Chris Kemp said the company raised the money from undisclosed investors to buy out shareholders and cover legal and other expenses, as well as refinance the company. Astra went public in 2021 during the SPAC boom, but suffered failures of its Rocket 3 vehicle. The company, teetering on bankruptcy, went private last year. Kemp said the funding will support work on Astra's larger Rocket 4 vehicle, adding that it also has a "profitable" business producing electric propulsion systems for satellites. [Core Memory]


An Australian company chaired by a former prime minister says it has an agreement with NASA on an air-launch system. Space Center Australia said it plans to spend $5 million though an agreement with the agency to access NASA expertise at the Wallops Flight Facility for a project called Karman Line, which would use a C-130 cargo aircraft for an air launch system. The venture's chairman, former prime minister Scott Morrison, said the company is working to raise $250 million to fund the project and claims to have interest from prospective, unidentified customers. Air-launch systems have struggled in the market given cheaper alternatives, as demonstrated by the failure of Virgin Orbit in 2023. [Australian Financial Review]


The German government has been funding the use of OneWeb satellite services in Ukraine. Eutelsat CEO Eva Berneke said Germany has funded fewer than 1,000 OneWeb terminals in operation in Ukraine over the last year, but said that number could soon grow to 5,000 to 10,000 terminals. That is a small fraction of the estimated 50,000 Starlink terminals in operation in Ukraine, but European officials said they are interested in reducing reliance on Starlink given shifting geopolitics. [Reuters]


The expected end of two aging satellites could make it difficult for scientists to monitor the ozone layer. Scientists have relied on data from NASA's Aura spacecraft and Canada's SCISAT, but both satellites are nearing the end of their lives. While other satellites are able to monitor the ozone layer in the stratosphere, the loss of data from Aura and SCISAT will impair the ability to scan for substances that can damage the ozone layer. "We will know what is happening to the ozone. What we'll lack is why," said one researcher. [Science News]


The Week Ahead


Monday:

  • Vandenberg Space Force Base, Calif.: Scheduled launch of a Falcon 9 carrying Starlink satellites at 6 p.m. Eastern.

Monday-Wednesday:

  • National Harbor, Md.: The Navy League's Sea-Air-Space 2025 conference includes sessions on the role of space in the maritime domain.

Monday-Thursday:

  • Colorado Springs: The 40th Space Symposium covers a broad range of civil, commercial and national security space issues.

Monday-Friday:

  • Dubai: The International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing (ISPRS) holds the Geospatial Week 2025 conference to discuss remote sensing and related topics. 

Tuesday:

  • Baikonur, Kazakhstan: Scheduled launch of a Soyuz-2.1a rocket carrying the Soyuz MS-27 spacecraft at 1:47 a.m. Eastern. The spacecraft is scheduled to dock with the International Space Station at 5:03 a.m. Eastern.

Wednesday:

Wednesday-Thursday:

Thursday:

  • Xichang, China: Projected launch of a Long March 3B carrying an undisclosed payload at about 1:30 p.m. Eastern.

  • Kennedy Space Center, Fla.: Scheduled launch of a Falcon 9 carrying Starlink satellites at 9:43 p.m. Eastern.

Friday:

Saturday:

  • Vandenberg Space Force Base, Calif.: Scheduled launch of a Falcon 9 on the NROL-192 mission for the NRO at 8:17 a.m. Eastern.

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Friday, April 4, 2025

Breaking: Space Force awards $13.7 billion in launch contracts through 2029

04/04/2025

BREAKING NEWS


SpaceX, ULA, Blue Origin win $13.7 billion in U.S. military launch contracts through 2029


The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded a combined $13.7 billion in launch service contracts to SpaceX, United Launch Alliance and Blue Origin, marking the first time three companies will share responsibility for launching high-priority military and intelligence payloads.


The contracts, announced April 4 by the U.S. Space Force's Space Systems Command, are part of the National Security Space Launch Phase 3 Lane 2 procurement, a cornerstone initiative designed to bolster the Pentagon's access to space for its most sensitive and risk-averse missions.


- Sandra Erwin

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๐Ÿ“…Project Kuiper has a launch date - SpaceNews This Week

Top Stories of the Week From SpaceNews
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04/04/2025

Welcome to our roundup of top SpaceNews stories, delivered every Friday! This week, Project Kuiper has an operational launch date, SpaceX launched a new private crew mission, the first Spectrum launch fails, and more.

Our Top Story

Project Kuiper readies long-awaited operational satellite launch

Kuiper

By Jason Rainbow, April 2, 2025


United Launch Alliance is set to loft the first 27 satellites of the more than 3,200 planned for Amazon's Project Kuiper broadband constellation April 9, roughly a year behind schedule as the company races to meet deployment deadlines.


Amazon said April 2 it is preparing to launch its first batch of satellites to low Earth orbit on an Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida, as part of a mission dubbed KA-01 (Kuiper Atlas 1).


The satellites feature significant upgrades over two prototypes ULA launched on an Atlas V in 2023, according to Amazon, including improved phased array antennas, processors, solar arrays, propulsion and optical inter-satellite links. Read More

Other News From the Week

MILITARY

U.S. Space Force chief: China's capabilities in orbit a 'destabilizing force'

Gen. Chance Saltzman, chief of space operations for the U.S. Space Force, told the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission that Beijing's space ambitions constitute a "powerful destabilizing force" to American dominance in the increasingly contested domain. Read More


China expands counterspace capabilities, new report finds

The Secure World Foundation's Global Counterspace Capabilities report 2025 states that China has implemented a sustained effort to develop a broad range of offensive counterspace capabilities, and details a number of activities in the areas of direct-ascent and co-orbital anti-satellite systems, rendezvous and proximity operations, directed energy weapons and electronic warfare. Read More

Loving SpaceNews This Week? Check out SpaceNext: AI, where we look at how artificial intelligence is becoming integral to the space industry, and how companies and agencies are using it for their missions.

COMMERCIAL

SpinLaunch announces plans for broadband satellite constellation

The company announced April 3 that it signed a contract worth 122.5 million euros ($136 million) with smallsat manufacturer Kongsberg NanoAvionics to produce 280 satellites for a constellation called Meridian Space. The deal includes a $12 million investment in SpinLaunch by NanoAvionics' parent company, Kongsberg Defence and Aerospace. Read More


MDA Space buys SatixFy to boost constellation production

Canada's MDA Space announced plans April 1 to buy Israeli satellite chipmaker SatixFy in a $269 million deal to further vertically integrate its constellation manufacturing capabilities. Mike Greenley, MDA's CEO, said SatixFy would strengthen the company's supply chain as it works to ramp up to producing two satellites a day with software-defined payloads that can be reprogrammed in orbit. Read More

LAUNCH

SpaceX launches Fram2 private astronaut mission

SpaceX launched a Crew Dragon spacecraft March 31 on a private astronaut mission that is the first crewed spaceflight to pass over the poles. A Falcon 9 lifted off at 9:47 p.m. Eastern from the Kennedy Space Center, carrying the Crew Dragon spacecraft Resilience. The spacecraft separated from the Falcon 9's upper stage about 10 minutes later. Read More


Investigation into failed New Glenn landing completed

The Federal Aviation Administration announced March 31 it accepted the findings of an investigation led by Blue Origin into the inaugural flight of New Glenn on Jan. 16. While the vehicle's upper stage reached orbit as planned, the first stage was unable to land on a Blue Origin landing ship in the Atlantic Ocean. Read More


Isar Aerospace's first Spectrum launch fails
The first launch of Isar Aerospace' Spectrum rocket failed March 30 when the vehicle lost attitude control seconds after liftoff and plummeted back to Earth, but the company still considered the launch a successful test flight. Read More

OPINION

Golden Dome: who and what should it defend?


mycelium bricks

By Henry Sokolski, April 4, 2025


On January 27, President Trump ordered the Pentagon to develop "a reference architecture, capabilities-based requirements, and an implementation plan for the next-generation missile defense shield," which, inspired by Israel's Iron Dome, came to be known as the Golden Dome. On March 28, the Pentagon blew past the White House-imposed deadline. 


This shouldn't be surprising. "At a minimum" the report must include plans to defend "the United States against ballistic, hypersonic, advanced cruise missiles, and other next-generation aerial attacks from peer, near-peer, and rogue adversaries." The White House then ordered that this report serve as the basis of a follow-on report on how best to provide theater defenses for U.S. bases and allies overseas from missile attacks.
Read More


Biotech is the launchpad for human survival in space

By Natasha Nicholson


SpaceNews is committed to publishing our community's diverse perspectives. Whether you're an academic, executive, engineer or even just a concerned citizen of the cosmos, send your arguments and viewpoints to opinion@spacenews.com to be considered for publication online or in our next magazine. The perspectives shared in these op-eds are solely those of the authors.

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What a trade war means for space

Plus: New launch contracts worth $13.7 billion from Space Force  โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ โ€Œ...