LeoLabs Selects the
Azores as Site for its next Space Radar;
Accelerates Presence in Europe for LEO Services
and Infrastructure
June 16, 2021
LeoLabs, Inc., announced
the Azores as the site for its next space radar.
As a strategic addition to LeoLabs expanding
global constellation of LEO sensors, the Azores
Space Radar will go operational in the first
half of 2022.
"We are very excited about
our decision to locate in the Azores," said Dan
Ceperley, CEO and LeoLabs co-Founder. "This is a
multi-decade investment on the part of LeoLabs,
and a great opportunity for us to support the
space sustainability goals of Portugal as they
grow their presence in the global space
community. It also signals LeoLabs commitment to
a long-term presence in Europe."
"The mission of LeoLabs
remains clear: serve the growth of the LEO
economy, and ensure the long-term survivability
of LEO for future generations. Today we are the
only end-to-end supplier of radar infrastructure
and services that can execute on this mission,"
continued Ceperley. "Our global network already
produces the world's largest number of LEO
observations, and the Azores Space Radar will
build on that and expand our tracking of LEO
objects by an additional 25%. This opens our
ability to grow our LEO catalogue from tracking
15,000 objects today to a massive 250,000
objects. The Azores Space Radar also adds more
timely updates on critical events in LEO,
including collisions, breakups, maneuvers, new
launches, and re-entries."
Strategic Location,
Strategic Partnerships
LeoLabs' Azores Space Radar
investment also reflects alignment with
Portugal's goals at the national and regional
levels. "We welcome LeoLabs to Portugal with the
installation of a new space radar in the
Azores," said Ricardo Conde, President of
Portugal Space. "LEO has rapidly emerged as a
sphere of commercial opportunity for innovators
like LeoLabs, and it is important to build
infrastructure that allows us to mitigate the
risks of increased space debris. The radar will
improve mapping and cataloguing services that
identify the positioning and dynamics of these
objects in LEO and inform our ability to set
policies that address risks."
"We are pleased to welcome
this ground-breaking investment by LeoLabs in
the Azores," said Dr Susete Amaro, Azores
Regional Secretary for Culture, Science and
Digital Transition. "The Azores Space Radar
represents an important contribution to the
development of Santa Maria's space ecosystem. It
further validates our Santa Maria Teleport as an
innovative model capable of attracting
international investment from the space sector.
We look forward to a long-term engagement with
LeoLabs, and for the Azores to become a bridge
to space just as we are a bridge across the
Atlantic."
Investment in
Portugal, Investment in Europe
LeoLabs investment in
Portugal represents an important addition to
LeoLabs' global radar constellation, and a key
element of infrastructure to inform satellite
operators, defense, space and regulatory
agencies, and the space insurance sector. "We
are delighted LeoLabs chose Portugal as home for
its first European space investment," said
Manuel Heitor, Portugal's Minister for Science,
Technology and Higher Education. "This is
clearly a strategic contribution to Portugal,
consistent with our national ethic of promoting
responsible stewardship of space, and a timely
step toward increasing our contribution to the
European space sector. In addition, LeoLabs and
Portugal are clearly excited about expanding
commercial and educational opportunities within
Portugal itself, applicable to space. We look
forward to a long and constructive engagement."
"We are certainly grateful
for the support of Minister Heitor and the
Portuguese government," stated Dan Ceperley. "As
we scale our operations, and we look forward to
building on our Portugal presence to engage more
with ESA, the EU SST and member state
initiatives, as well as engaging other European
space actors in defense, space agency and
commercial operators. In the near term,"
continued Ceperley, "LeoLabs is looking to
expand our engagement in Europe along two
dimensions: 1) data licensing and services
agreements, and 2) additional radar sites. The
announcement today with Portugal is an
encouraging and fortunate start for LeoLabs, and
we will continue to build on this partnership to
deepen our European operations."
Low Earth Orbit is rapidly
emerging as the commercial frontier in space.
Rapid deployment of new satellite
constellations, the demand for innovative
services from imaging to broadband to IoT
(internet of things), and the billions of
dollars of new investment in space-based
infrastructure are redefining a domain shared by
governments, space agencies, regulators,
commercial operators, and space insurance.
Against this backdrop of
unprecedented opportunity are two challenges
critical to investment and the long-term
viability of LEO. The first is the need to
develop LEO sustainably by addressing the threat
posed by space debris. Approximately 250,000
dangerous pieces of orbital debris have gone
untracked by government legacy systems that can
no longer keep pace with increasing risks to
satellite constellations. Sustainability is not
just an arena for operators to address, but also
for regulators to establish international best
practices, set standards, and define rules of
behavior.
A second challenge critical
to the long-term viability of LEO is keeping it
open and secure. As the number of private space
enterprises and space-faring nations continue to
grow, so does the need to track and make
transparent the full range of events that
threaten an open space environment.
"The single greatest
challenge to both the sustainability and
security threats in LEO is solving the "data
deficit", said Dan Ceperley, LeoLabs CEO. "The
number of assets in LEO doubled last year, will
double again this year, and is expected to grow
25x in the next five years. LeoLabs is already
the largest provider of data for LEO today, and
this lead will expand rapidly as we execute on
our constellation of radars." Ceperley
continued, "The legacy government-built SSA
infrastructures of the past simply cannot scale
to track the new levels of LEO activity, and
they have no path to get there. Our commercially
driven infrastructure is the only viable and
scalable way to address this "data deficit".
The Azores Space Radar will
make a critical contribution to solving these
challenges. Because of its strategic Atlantic
location, the radar complements other LeoLabs
radar sites, and will increase the frequency of
observations LeoLabs collects on each satellite
and orbital debris. This improves response
times, and supports effective tracking and
safety of flight. Second, the additional two
S-band radars at the Azores adds critical
resiliency to the global network, improving
operational service levels and persistent
tracking. And third, the Azores Space Radar
accelerates LeoLabs ability to discover, track
and catalogue the objects never before tracked,
those under 10 centimeters.