EuropeInternationalSatcom

NanoAvionics to Build Sats for SpinLaunch

Image: NanoAvionics

NanoAvionics will build 280 satellites for SpinLaunch’s planned LEO broadband mega-constellation under a €122.5M ($135M) contract.

The Lithuania-based company will build the satellites—which will be the first batch of a planned 1,200-satellite constellation—in its newly expanded production facilities in Vilnius. 

More details: The satellites will be based on NanoAvionics’ flight-proven MP42 microsatellite bus, which offers similar performance to competitors in a lighter sat. Two demonstration spacecraft are planned, including one expected to launch in 2026. 

The sats will be fitted with reflectarray antennas and high-performance avionics to deliver terabits-per-second capacity. Each spacecraft will follow a repeating ground track, which will enable the constellation to provide “uninterrupted global connectivity” after a single launch.

“The network is designed to meet the growing demand for flexible, high-speed and secure satellite communication services for enterprise users globally,” SpinLaunch officials said in the statement.

Day job: SpinLaunch is better known for its attempts to develop a giant orbital launch system, designed to fling satellites into LEO using a 100-meter-long rotating arm driven by a set of electric motors. 

The company has been developing plans to build a LEO broadband constellation, called Meridian Space, since 2020 and filed a spectrum application in 2021. The firm hopes that the constellation’s “highly differentiated” architecture will allow the project to gain a foothold in the increasingly competitive market.

Correction: This story has been updated to correct the specs for the orbital launch system.

Related Stories
EuropePolicy

ESA Secures Record Funding Levels at 2025 Council of Ministers

ESA member states approved €22.07B in total contributions covering the next three years of ESA operations—up from €16.9B in 2022.

EuropeLunar

Thales Alenia Space Picks its Lunar Lander Team for Argonaut

It’s been almost a year since Thales Alenia Space’s Italian subsidiary won the initial ESA contract to build a descent module for a lunar lander. Getting down to the lunar surface will be a team effort, though, and on Friday the space firm announced it has picked its team.

EuropeISAM

Orbit Fab Lands ESA, UK Space Agency Refueling Contract

Orbit Fab wants to build gas stations in space, but for its latest contract win, perhaps petrol is the right word.

EuropeMilitary

Germany Outlines its Defensive Space Plans

Speak softly and carry a big stick.