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LEO Satellite Boom: Defense Contracts, Manufacturing Scale-Up Drive Space Tech Growth to 254B by 2035
Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the space technology industry shows steady momentum in LEO satellite deployments, defense contracts, and manufacturing expansions, with no major disruptions reported. AeroVironment announced active negotiations with the U.S. Space Force on March 3 for its BADGER phased array antennas under the SCAR program, pausing the contract temporarily to shift to a firm-fixed-price model while investing in New Mexico manufacturing capacity to outpace competitors.[1] This underscores leaders' focus on scaling production amid defense demands.
Partnerships advanced quickly: On March 2, SSC Space deployed Kratos' OpenSpace platform for its new SSC Space Go service, enabling real-time data downlink for LEO small satellites, interoperable with diverse payloads and scalable for high-throughput missions.[2] AST SpaceMobile secured a U.S. Space Development Agency contract for direct-to-device tactical comms via its BlueBird constellation, plus carrier deals with Orange, Verizon, and stc Group, signaling a pivot from R&D to revenue-generating global connectivity.[4]
SpaceX launched 29 Starlink satellites in early March, bolstering its LEO broadband network and partnerships like ZIPAIR's in-flight internet, while Florida's Space Coast solidifies as a U.S. launch hub.[6] The LEO market, valued at 11.22 billion dollars in 2024, is projected to hit 254 billion by 2035, driven by constellations and edge AI.[10]
No new regulatory shifts or consumer behavior changes emerged, though supply chain resilience is evident in expansions like AV's. Compared to prior weeks' Artemis delays—Artemis III now eyed for 2028 amid Starship refueling setbacks[9]—current activity feels more commercially grounded, with firms like Kratos and SSC emphasizing software-defined agility over hardware overhauls. Leaders respond by prioritizing virtualization and dual-use tech for defense-commercial crossover, positioning for 2026 growth without acute challenges. (298 words)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Partnerships advanced quickly: On March 2, SSC Space deployed Kratos' OpenSpace platform for its new SSC Space Go service, enabling real-time data downlink for LEO small satellites, interoperable with diverse payloads and scalable for high-throughput missions.[2] AST SpaceMobile secured a U.S. Space Development Agency contract for direct-to-device tactical comms via its BlueBird constellation, plus carrier deals with Orange, Verizon, and stc Group, signaling a pivot from R&D to revenue-generating global connectivity.[4]
SpaceX launched 29 Starlink satellites in early March, bolstering its LEO broadband network and partnerships like ZIPAIR's in-flight internet, while Florida's Space Coast solidifies as a U.S. launch hub.[6] The LEO market, valued at 11.22 billion dollars in 2024, is projected to hit 254 billion by 2035, driven by constellations and edge AI.[10]
No new regulatory shifts or consumer behavior changes emerged, though supply chain resilience is evident in expansions like AV's. Compared to prior weeks' Artemis delays—Artemis III now eyed for 2028 amid Starship refueling setbacks[9]—current activity feels more commercially grounded, with firms like Kratos and SSC emphasizing software-defined agility over hardware overhauls. Leaders respond by prioritizing virtualization and dual-use tech for defense-commercial crossover, positioning for 2026 growth without acute challenges. (298 words)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI