The SATELLITE 2024 conference kicked off on Monday at the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C., with hundreds of attendees from across the globe.
In a keynote speech, Troy Meink, principal deputy director of the National Reconnaissance Office, said the NRO has changed its procurement methods to take advantage of small satellite technologies and lower launch costs.
But, he added, the agency is embracing a hybrid approach, pursuing a mix of traditional big birds and smallsats.
"Our main priority is to meet the requirements with minimum risk," he said. "Physics gets a vote. We can't do everything with proliferated LEO."
The NRO's upcoming launch campaign reflects this two-track strategy:
A small NRO sat dubbed NROL-123 is set to hitch a ride to LEO aboard a Rocket Lab Electron small launch vehicle from the company's new Wallops, Virginia, pad during a window opening March 21. It'll be Rocket Lab's first NRO launch from U.S. soil.
One of the NRO's largest-ever satellites, NROL-70, is scheduled to go up on a United Launch Alliance Delta 4 Heavy from Cape Canaveral on March 28 — the swan song for ULA's Delta program.
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