Wednesday, April 15, 2026

A new blueprint for the Space Force - Space Symposium 2026

Plus: A push to restore Mars Sample Return funding
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SpaceNews coverage from Space Symposium 2026

04/15/2026  |  READ IN BROWSER


All of our latest reporting from the 41st Space Symposium in Colorado Springs


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The latest from the 41st Space Symposium: Gen. Chance Saltzman released a blueprint for the future of the Space Force, Senators push to restore Mars Sample Return funding, Vast unveiled a new docking adapter for future space stations and more.


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If you’re at the show, be sure to pick up a copy of our April magazine, which features the debut edition of our SN Focus section on space investment opportunities in North America. Stop by the booth or reach out to sales@spacenews.com to discuss how to partner with us on upcoming SN Focus reports on economic development opportunities around the globe and sections featuring higher education and professional development programs


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Saltzman unveils blueprint for Space Force’s future

By Sandra Erwin

Chief of Space Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman released a warfighting blueprint for the U.S. Space Force, and asked the audience to critique it.


In a keynote address April 15, Saltzman unveiled unclassified versions of two foundational documents, the Future Operating Environment 2040 and the Objective Force 2040, framing them as a paired construct that defines both the problem and the solution for the U.S. Space Force.


Meink: Space Force must ‘execute’ as budget set to surge

The U.S. Space Force is poised to receive the largest funding increase in its short history, a windfall that is shifting attention inside the Pentagon from strategy to whether the service can actually spend the money fast enough, Air Force Secretary Troy Meink said.


NASA seeks proposals for commercial TDRSS replacement

NASA issued April 10 a draft solicitation for Project NEXUS, a part of the broader Commercial Services Project. That document is an effort by the agency to move from traditional government owned and operated communications systems to commercial services. The goal is to replace the existing Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System.


Senators seek increased funding for NASA Mars missions

Several senators are asking appropriators to increase funding for NASA’s robotic Mars exploration efforts to at least $400 million, fearing “severe and irreversible harm” if funding is not restored.

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Vast offers new docking adapter for large space stations

Commercial space station developer Vast unveiled a new docking interface called the Large Docking Adapter, which the company is offering to the broader industry for future large stations and spacecraft.


Turion Space raises $75 million to expand maneuverable satellite fleet

The California-based startup, which develops satellites and payloads focused on space domain awareness and non-Earth imaging, said it raised more than $75 million in a Series B funding round.


Kepler to lead interoperability tests for ESA’s HydRON optical relay network

The European Space Agency has awarded a $22 million contract to Kepler Communications, a Canadian small satellite operator, to lead a hosted payload mission to test terminal interoperability for HydRON, ESA’s flagship optical relay network program.

Blue Origin moves toward launch at Vandenberg

Blue Origin moved a step closer to launching New Glenn rockets from Vandenberg Space Force Base with a U.S. Space Force decision to conduct final negotiations of a lease for Space Launch Complex (SLC)-14.


NRO highlights government and industry partnerships

The National Reconnaissance Office, the agency responsible for U.S. spy satellites, put out a call for partners to accelerate its adoption of state-of-the-art intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities.


SES and Boeing move toward factory-installed multi-orbit inflight connectivity

SES announced an agreement with Boeing April 14 to start integrating multi-orbit hardware during aircraft production, marking a key step away from retrofit installations to incorporate low Earth orbit broadband.


Commentary: Defining acquisition on a wartime footing

Space Force Lt. Gen. Philip Garrant writes about how Space Systems Command is working to adapt acquisition practices to the pace of modern military operations.

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In the latest episode of Space Minds, recorded at Space Symposium, Mike Gruss talks with Nightwing’s Joe Mazur to discuss the intersection of cyber and space. They chat about the acceleration of cyber operations, the role of offensive cyber capabilities and how acquisition is evolving. Watch now.

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Editor’s Choice: Four themes guiding record-breaking space investments


Plus: A new space warfighting model
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04/15/2026

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By Dan Robitzski


SpaceNews reporters — and much of the space industry — have been busy this week at Space Symposium in Colorado Springs. Symposium serves as a converging point, bringing together the commercial, military, financial, scientific, political and civic space communities onto the same campus for a week-long conference of meetings, panels and announcements. 


Meanwhile, the world outside the conference doesn't quiet down. This year’s Symposium arrives on the heels of big news for nearly all of those sectors: NASA’s Artemis 2 success, a White House budget proposal with contrasting implications for NASA and the Space Force, updates on a SpaceX IPO, a growing drumbeat of space (and especially space-enabled) warfare, all amidst a flurry of mergers, acquisitions and a wave of fundraising across the industry poised to break investment records.


Based on numbers in a quarterly report from the early-stage investor Space Capital, the first quarter saw $6.7 billion in global investments into space infrastructure. That’s more than twice the amount invested over that time last year. The report also notes that 2026 is on track to be a record-breaking investment year for space overall, citing recent interest in orbital data centers for AI applications and anticipation of reliable heavy launch that could see investments surpass 2025’s $55.3 billion.


Broadly, that money is largely flowing into the same categories that are top of mind and top of agenda at Symposium, Space Capital CEO Chad Anderson told SpaceNews’ Jason Rainbow.


“The four themes dominating the agenda this week — AI and space, national security convergence, lunar economics and the commercial LEO transition — are exactly where the capital is moving,” Anderson said.


Consider some of this week’s headlines as they align to that framework:


  • AI and space: L3Harris Technologies struck an agreement with Madrid-based startup Xoople to develop a satellite constellation designed for a still-emerging concept in the space industry: Earth AI.

  • National security: U.S. defense contractors BAE Systems and Lockheed Martin said they are accelerating internal investments in maneuverable satellite designs, betting that military advocacy for “dynamic space operations” will translate into sustained demand for spacecraft that can move, coordinate and respond in orbit.

  • Lunar economics: The White House released a policy April 14 directing NASA, the Pentagon and the Department of Energy to develop space nuclear power systems that could launch as soon as 2028.

  • Commercial LEO transition: Commercial space station developer Vast unveiled a new docking interface the company is offering to the broader industry for future large stations and spacecraft.


Only time will tell if those remain the space industry’s main focuses, or if new trends and priorities emerge over the rest of the year.


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~$11 billion

The amount Amazon will pay to acquire Globalstar, which operates a constellation and holds mobile satellite services spectrum, in a move to enter the direct-to-device satellite connectivity market.

Gen. Stephen Whiting speaks April 14, 2026 at the Space Symposium. Credit: Tom Kimmell Photography

Gen. Stephen Whiting speaks April 14, 2026 at the Space Symposium. Credit: Space Foundation

A NEW SPACE WARFIGHTING MODEL


The United States Space Command announced a new series of wargames called the Apollo Maneuvers, meant to model and help guide the U.S. military toward a warfighting model in which satellites and valuable space assets can readily maneuver, instead of being sitting ducks resting in their orbits.


Gen. Stephen Whiting, head of U.S. Space Command, said at Space Symposium that it’s now critical to embrace satellites capable of moving and adapting in the event of combat.


“The necessity of maneuver in space has intensified over the past year, as we’ve watched China demonstrate their orbital refueling and logistics prowess,” Whiting said during a keynote address at the conference, which warned against falling behind China in space operation capabilities.


“A satellite which is locked in a predictable orbit is fighting from a fixed position,” Whiting added. “And it’s a target. It’s a known position on a map waiting to be bypassed or neutralized.”


Space Command’s wargames are modeled on the Louisiana Maneuvers, Whiting explained. Those are the large-scale Army exercises that helped validate new concepts of mechanized warfare before World War II.

Trending This Week


Gravitics is preparing to test a large orbital platform designed to store multiple spacecraft in orbit, allowing customers to deploy them as needed without waiting for a launch from Earth.


Gen. Chance Saltzman released a warfighting blueprint for the U.S. Space Force intended to start discussions about the future of space warfare and what the Space Force needs to reach that point.


Several senators are asking appropriators to increase funding for NASA’s robotic Mars exploration efforts, fearing “severe and irreversible harm” if funding is not restored.


President Donald Trump signed the Small Business Innovation and Economic Security Act April 13, reestablishing key sources of funding for early-stage space companies.


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A new blueprint for the Space Force - Space Symposium 2026

Plus: A push to restore Mars Sample Return funding  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌...