Tuesday, May 21, 2024

NGA doubling down on commercial space data

National security insights for space professionals. Delivered Tuesdays.

In this week's edition:

• Space Force to commercial industry: 'We need all hands on deck'

• Military to further study value of in-space satellite refueling

• Starfish Space wins $37.5 million defense contract


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Today's highlights:

Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, with his then-deputy prime minister Dmitry Rogozin, far left, at Vostochny Cosmodrome following the space center's scrubbed inaugural launch

RUSSIA'S NUKES IN SPACE — A new report from the National Security Space Association pushes back on the White House's assertion that Russia's reported development of a space-based nuclear weapon does not pose an immediate threat to humans on Earth.


NSSA says the detonation of a nuclear weapon in space has the capability to produce widespread and long lasting disruption and damage to critical infrastructures and human lives would be at risk.

  • The discourse about this potential threat, says NSSA, "highlights the general lack of knowledge about U.S. interests in space, the stakes of a conflict that begins in or extends to space, and the array of foreign threats to space assets and operations, as well as the need to increase awareness and educate Congress and the public."

  • "Diplomacy should be used to rally allies, partners, and other members of the international community in support of U.S.-led efforts to generate private and public pressure to convince Putin to reconsider the nuclear ASAT program," says the report.

NEW WARNING ABOUT RUSSIAN ASAT — The U.S. government claims that a recently launched Russian satellite is a counterspace weapon placed in nearly the same orbit as an American reconnaissance satellite.


Amb. Robert Wood, U.S. alternate representative for special political affairs in the United Nations, made the allegation during a debate on Monday by the U.N. Security Council on a Russian resolution proposing a ban on the placement of weapons of any kind in space.

In other news 🚀

Inversion Space, a three-year-old startup, is setting its sights on the military logistics market with its concept of "warehouses in space." The company envisions deploying reusable reentry capsules to store cargo in orbit, and delivering it to any point on Earth within an hour.


A pathfinder mission dubbed "Ray" is scheduled for launch as early as October on the SpaceX Transporter-12 rideshare mission. Funded by Inversion's $10 million seed round, Ray will test technologies that will support the development of a larger capsule, the company said.

Otter vehicle/ Starfish Space

The startup Starfish Space has secured a $37.5 million contract with the U.S. Space Force to develop, launch, and operate the company's Otter satellite servicing vehicle in geostationary orbit.


The contract is a so-called STRATFI (Strategic Funding Increase) agreement, awarded by the Space Systems Command's Assured Access to Space program office. It combines $37.5 million in government funds with an additional $30 million in venture capital investment.

The weather intelligence firm Tomorrow.io was awarded a $10.2 million contract from the Department of Defense to produce and deploy two satellites equipped with microwave sounders for military weather forecasting.


Under the contract, Tomorrow.io to manufacture and deliver two microwave sounders by May 2025. These instruments will measure atmospheric temperature and moisture, feeding data into weather prediction models used by the Air Force's Weather Systems Branch.

Thanks for reading ! Please send comments, suggestions and tips to serwin@spacenews.com

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