Thursday, April 30, 2026

York Space's latest acquisition

Plus: Fund raising for a Starship lookalike
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04/30/2026

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By Jeff Foust


In today's edition: York Space to acquire antenna company All.Space, Chinese startup raises funding for a Starship lookalike, Falcon Heavy launches the third and final ViaSat-3 satellite, and more. 


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Top Stories


York Space Systems will acquire satellite terminal manufacturer All.Space in a $355 million deal. The companies announced the deal Thursday, set to close in the third quarter. York will pay $155 million in cash and up to 5.9 million shares of York stock to acquire All.Space. Founded in 2019 and headquartered in the United Kingdom, All.Space makes multi-orbit, multi-band communications terminals designed to connect across multiple Earth orbits. The planned acquisition is York's second since it went public earlier this year. In March, the company acquired Orbion Space Technology, a supplier of satellite propulsion systems. It is part of a strategy of expanding across the satellite communications value chain. [SpaceNews]


Chinese launch startup Cosmoleap raised $73 million for work on a Starship-like rocket. Cosmoleap, whose full name is Beijing Dahang Yueqian Technology Co., Ltd., said it raised the funding from several investors to support development of the Yueqian-1 rocket and what it describes as China's first "tower catch and landing recovery" rocket system. The tower recovery system resembles the SpaceX Mechzilla tower system with "chopstick" arms. Cosmoleap says final assembly and testing of the Yueqian-1 rocket, capable of placing up to 18,000 kilograms into low Earth orbit, will begin in the second half of 2026, with the debut flight planned for 2027. [SpaceNews]


While air leaks in a Russian space station module have stopped, the cause of the cracks in that module remains unresolved. At a meeting Wednesday of the International Space Station Advisory Council, the committee said engineers at NASA and Roscosmos have yet to find the root cause of the small cracks seen in PrK, a vestibule of the Zvezda module. Those cracks had been linked to a small but persistent air leak there over several years, although that leak stopped in recent months after cosmonauts applied sealant to the cracks. While the leaks have stopped, crews take precautions such as limiting the time the vestibule, which links a docking port to the rest of the station, is pressurized. The committee said NASA and Roscosmos still don't agree on the severity of the cracking. [SpaceNews]


Planet is developing a new version of its Tanager spacecraft with enhanced capability to detect and monitor methane and trace-gas emissions. The company announced Thursday a version of Tanager that will fly a shortwave infrared instrument rather than a hyperspectral imager. Planet will produce SWIR Tanager with the nonprofit environmental-monitoring organization Carbon Mapper and the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which designs and builds Tanager imaging spectrometers. SWIR Tanager will gather 30-meter-resolution imagery in 100-kilometer swaths, optimized for the spectral bands for atmospheric gas detection. [SpaceNews]


The Space Rapid Capabilities Office selected three companies to develop counter-surveillance sensors. The office, a specialized acquisition arm within the United States Space Force focused on rapidly fielding space systems, said Wednesday it awarded contracts worth $3 million each to Assurance Technology Corp., Raptor Dynamix and Innovative Signal Analysis. The contracts will cover development of payloads that can be installed on satellites in geosynchronous orbit to detect and characterize emissions from ground-based radars. That would allow the satellites to know when they are being tracked and targeted. [SpaceNews]


The Canadian Space Agency has terminated a contract it awarded last year to Spire for a series of wildfire-monitoring satellites. Spire said in a regulatory filing last week that CSA terminated for convenience a contract worth 72 million Canadian dollars ($52.7 million) for WildFireSat, a set of 10 cubesats equipped with sensors to detect wildfires. Neither Spire nor CSA disclosed why the contract was canceled, although Spire executives said in an earnings call in March that work on the contract was paused while it discussed timing and requirements with the agency. CSA said it planned to continue work on WildFireSat with other Canadian government agencies and would soon engage with industry on revised plans. [SpaceNews]


Other News


The first Falcon Heavy mission in 18 months successfully launched the third and final ViaSat-3 satellite Wednesday. The Falcon Heavy lifted off from the Kennedy Space Center at 10:13 a.m. Eastern, deploying the ViaSat-3 F3 spacecraft into a geostationary transfer orbit nearly five hours later. Viasat expects F3 to enter commercial service late this summer over the Asia Pacific, following extensive health checks on the operator's payload and spacecraft bus from Boeing. This satellite uses a different large deployable antenna than the one used on the first two ViaSat-3 spacecraft. The antenna on the first failed to deploy properly, depriving it of more than 90% of its capacity, while the antenna on the second satellite is in the process of deployment. This was the first Falcon Heavy mission since October 2024, when it launched NASA's Europa Clipper mission, although additional Falcon Heavy launches are planned for this year. [SpaceNews]


SpaceX also launched more Starlink satellites from California. A Falcon 9 lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at 10:42 p.m. Eastern, putting 24 Starlink satellites into orbit. This was the 52nd launch this year by SpaceX, 42 of which carried Starlink satellites. [Spaceflight Now]


A Falcon 9 upper stage that launched a pair of lunar landers last year will make its own crash landing on the moon in August. Astronomers tracking the upper stage, which launched Firefly's Blue Ghost 1 and ispace's Hakuto-R Resilience landers in January 2025, said the upper stage is on a trajectory to collide with the moon Aug. 5. The stage is expected to hit near Einstein crater on the western limb of the moon, but the impact is unlikely to be visible from the Earth as it will take place while the region is in sunlight. [SpaceNews]


Morocco is the latest country to join the Artemis Accords. Nasser Bourita, Morocco’s foreign minister, signed the Accords in a ceremony in the capital of Rabat attended by U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau and the U.S. ambassador to Morocco. Morocco is the 64th country to sign the Accords and the third to do so in the last 10 days. One former agency official attributed the surge in signings to the recent Artemis 2 mission. [SpaceNews]


L3Harris has confidentially filed plans to take its missile unit public. The confidential filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission allows the company to work with regulators before making the registration statement public. L3Harris said earlier this year it would spin off the missile unit into a standalone publicly traded company, part of a deal that included a $1 billion investment from the Pentagon. [Reuters]


FROM SPACENEWS

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Attack of the Killer Regolith


"Our number one enemy on the moon is not China, it's regolith. I don't know what the Chinese are going to do, but I know the regolith is going to attack us, and attack us viciously."


– Mike Gold, president of Redwire Space, discussing the challenges posed by lunar regolith at the Lunar Surface Innovation Consortium spring meeting Wednesday.


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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Editor’s Choice: FAA announces commercial space toll

Plus: Pausing (and charging for) TraCSS
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04/29/2026

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By Dan Robitzski


Is the highway to space about to become a toll road? The Federal Aviation Administration plans to begin collecting fees from commercial space companies for their launches and reentries.


The logic is that imposing a fee on commercial operators — 25 cents per pound of payload, capped at $30,000 per launch or reentry — would be a pittance for companies already spending millions on space operations. But it would add up to significant revenue for the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST), which would be able to make up for annual budget decreases without needing to take that money from taxpayer coffers. That money, which could total $1 million per year from Starlink launches alone, would then allow AST to improve integration of launches and reentries into the national airspace system directed by an FAA reauthorization act in 2024. Just think of it as paying a highway toll under the assumption that it helps the traffic lights keep working.


The fees have been in the works for a long time, and will be retroactively applied to all launches in 2026. But sticking points remain. For example, the fees per pound of payload are set to increase year over year. And the launch industry (namely SpaceX, which would inevitably pay more in fees than any other operator due to the frequency of its launches) has a long history of butting heads with the FAA over licensing and other regulatory issues.


One reason for the change, alleviating taxpayer burden, is an unexpected talking point given the role various government agencies play as space industry anchor customers. The White House proposed giving the Space Force 71.2 billion taxpayer dollars in 2027, more than doubling its budget. Last week alone, the Space Systems Command, the Space Force’s acquisition arm, awarded SpaceX a $57 million contract to demonstrate intersatellite communications technology. SpaceX was also one of 12 companies included in the Space Force’s $3.2 billion award to develop Golden Dome interceptor prototypes. 


In this case, maybe it’s better to think of companies pitching in to improve a government service, one  that helps space travel run smoothly, as  more of a rebate program. It may also be one that’s simply the price of doing business off-world.


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The valuation for the military space startup True Anomaly following a $650 million Series D funding round to support Golden Dome interceptor development.

PAUSING (AND CHARGING FOR) TraCSS


The Commerce Department may soon pause its Traffic Coordination System for Space (TraCSS), a prototype service it’s been developing to provide space safety information free of charge. TraCSS has had a turbulent time, with funding in jeopardy since the White House’s 2026 budget proposal sought to cancel the program. In recent months, the TraCSS team, too, has been considering imposing user fees — an option that seems increasingly likely while the Commerce Department develops a “new operating and financial structure” during the potential pause.


“There’s a lot of different options on the table,” said Taylor Jordan, director of the Office of Space Commerce, said at the Goddard Space Science Symposium in March. “We’re not dead set on applying some type of user-fee construct to [Space Policy Directive]-3 for these systems, but it gives us the flexibility to have those conversations.”


Those fees have prompted serious debate, some of which has been published on SpaceNews, about which space services should be free for the sake of the greater good, and how to balance the worldwide need for space safety info with the need to somehow pay for those services.

Trending This Week


Overview Energy, a startup developing space-based solar power systems, announced an agreement to provide energy for data centers operated by Meta. Overview will transmit up to one gigawatt of power when other sources of energy, like terrestrial solar power, are unavailable.


Tensor is aiming to supply a component that could become critical to the Pentagon’s missile-defense architecture in space: compact radios capable of rapidly moving targeting data between satellites and interceptors.


A spent Falcon 9 stage used to launch a pair of commercial lunar landers is projected to crash on to the moon Aug. 5, according to astronomers. It’s the first time something like this has happened since 2022.


A manufacturing issue involving a European company has resulted in corrosion in modules produced for both the lunar Gateway and Axiom Space’s commercial space station.


FROM SPACENEWS

Reach more than 2,000 smallsat professionals in our daily show editions published during SmallSat Europe in Amsterdam from May 26 to 28.

Be part of the conversation at Amsterdam: Reach attendees via our first-ever conference dailies outside the United States. Our SmallSat Europe editions offer high-visibility that helps you reach defense, security and commercial smallsat decisionmakers. Book your ad, press release or sponsored content today – premium positions are still available. Start a conversation with our team.

Subscribe to SpaceNews



York Space's latest acquisition

Plus: Fund raising for a Starship lookalike  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ...