BusinessRockets

Firefly Aerospace Buys Spaceflight Inc.

Image: Firefly

Launch startup Firefly Aerospace announced yesterday that it has acquired Spaceflight Inc., a space services and transportation company, to build its on-orbit service offerings.

Firefly did not disclose the terms of the deal. 

Firefly: The Texas-based rocket startup, which focuses on the small to medium-lift market, achieved orbit for the first time in October with its Alpha launch vehicle. Firefly aspires to be a one stop shop for space transportation, offering launch services and in-orbit transportation to bring payloads to specific orbits.

Spaceflight Inc.: The space services company organizes launch rideshares, having completed over 460 successful payload deployments, and operates orbital transfer vehicles capable of last-mile satellite deliveries.

  • The Spaceflight acquisition provides Firefly with further mission management expertise while expanding its product suite to offer an end-to-end service for satellite customers. 

“The combination of Spaceflight’s on-orbit experience with Firefly’s launch vehicles, Blue Ghost landers, and Space Utility Vehicles is an overnight game changer for our customers and investors,” said Firefly chief Bill Weber.

Recent tug consolidation: Earlier this year, Launcher, a space tug competitor, merged with commercial space station company Vast, citing the benefits of a well-capitalized single-parent investor. Orbital transfer vehicle startups are capital-intensive businesses that compete in an increasingly crowded market. Nonetheless, they remain integral to the space transportation value chain. 

Related Stories
BusinessLEO

Katalyst Acquires OTV Startup Atomos

Katalyst acquired Atomos in a bid to grow its in-space servicing business, the companies announced today.

Deep SpaceRocketsStartups

Pulsar Fusion Unveils Nuclear-Powered Rocket

The Sunbird Migratory Transfer Vehicle is a nuclear-fusion powered rocket capable of reaching 329,000 mph.

BusinessLaunchTechnology

Phantom Space and Ubotica Team Up to Bring AI to Orbit

The volume of data being gathered in space is growing exponentially, and the capacity to ship that data back to Earth is increasingly constrained. That’s why more companies want to analyze their data on orbit. Phantom Space is no different.

BusinessDeep Space

A Post-Mission Debrief with AstroForge’s CEO

“Will we actually land on an asteroid and get these beautiful samples? Probably f—— not,” Gialich told Payload. “But do we hope to change the name of the game for access to deep space, and show people that the price point we’re doing this at is doable? I hope.”