|
Daily news


 |
SES, ESA and
European Commission partnering to Deliver Satellite
Quantum Cryptography System for European
Cybersecurity
22 September 2022
An SES-led consortium of 20
European companies, with the European Space Agency
(ESA) and European Commission support, will design,
develop, launch and operate the EAGLE-1
satellite-based end-to-end system for secure Quantum
Key Distribution (QKD), enabling in-orbit validation
and demonstration of next-generation cyber-security
across Europe.
The groundbreaking partnership
between ESA and an SES-led consortium, with the
European Commission support, is advancing Europe to
the front of space innovation with satellite-enabled
QKD. Together with its European partners, SES will
build the first sovereign European end-to-end
space-based QKD system, developing and operating a
dedicated low earth orbit (LEO) satellite and
building a state-of-the-art QKD operations centre in
Luxembourg. The project is co-funded by the ESA
contribution of Germany, Luxembourg, Austria, Italy,
the Netherlands, Switzerland, Belgium and the Czech
Republic under ARTES, as well as the European
Commission through Horizon Europe.
Using the EAGLE-1 system, ESA
and the European Union Member States will achieve
the first step to demonstrate and validate QKD
technologies from low earth orbit to the ground. The
EAGLE-1 project will provide valuable mission data
for next generation Quantum Communication
Infrastructures (QCIs), contributing for example to
the EU plans to deploy a sovereign, autonomous
cross-border quantum secure communications networks.
The EAGLE-1 satellite is due to
launch in 2024 and will then complete three years of
in-orbit mission supported by the European
Commission. During this operational phase, the
satellite will allow European Union governments and
institutions as well as critical business sectors
early access to long-distance QKD to path the way
towards an EU constellation enabling ultra-secure
data transmissions.
To implement the ultra-secure
cryptographic key exchange system of EAGLE-1, the
consortium will develop the QKD payload, terrestrial
optical station, scalable quantum operational
networks and key management system to interface with
national QCIs.
Josef Aschbacher, ESA Director
General, said, “European space innovation has gained
strong momentum both from a technology perspective
and in terms of commercialisation. It allows us to
develop and implement next-generation, future-proof
projects in space across critical domains like
secure communication, next-generation networks and
cybersecurity. Led by ESA, partially financed by the
European Commission and implemented by SES, EAGLE-1
is a major step towards making the secure and
scalable European Quantum Communications
Infrastructure a reality.”
Elodie Viau, Director of
Telecommunications and Integrated Applications at
ESA, said, “In today’s increasingly interconnected
world, keeping information secure is paramount.
Robust encryption keys as well as technologies
enabling their secure distribution are vital to this
endeavour. We are proud to forge this partnership
between ESA and a consortium led by SES to create
the EAGLE-1 highly secure and autonomous quantum key
distribution system. ESA enables the European space
industry to succeed by federating industry around
large-scale programmes, achieving competitive leaps
forward.”
“European security and
sovereignty in a future world of quantum computing
is critical to the success of Europe and its Member
States,” said Steve Collar, CEO of SES. “We are
proud to leverage our multi-orbit credentials and
our innovative platforms and solutions in
partnership with ESA, the European Commission and
the Luxembourg Government to advance quantum
communications and implement the EAGLE-1 system,
which is called to be a cornerstone for the
development of secure and sovereign European
networks of the future.”
|
|
|
|