Spire Global Awarded
€16 Million ESA Contract to Design and Demonstrate
Satellite-Based Aviation Surveillance System
July 25, 2023
The European Space Agency (ESA)
has awarded Spire Global, Inc. (NYSE: SPIR) (“Spire”
or “the Company”), a global provider of space-based
data, analytics and space services, a €16 million
phased contract for the EURIALO project, which will
develop the preliminary design and demonstrator for
a global space-based independent aircraft
surveillance system. The project framework is part
of ESA’s programme of Advanced Research in
Telecommunications Systems (ARTES) in its
Directorate of Connectivity and Secure
Communications.
The EURIALO project intends to
design and demonstrate the viability of a novel
system that uses a satellite constellation to track
aircraft by determining their exact position based
on different times of arrivals of radio frequency
(RF) signals, a technology known in the aviation
industry as multilateration (MLAT). Spire will
develop the mission and system design for a
satellite constellation in low Earth orbit (LEO) and
then design, deploy and operate a demonstrator
mission that proves the performance of the system
and its critical technologies. Following the initial
design and demonstrator phases, there is a potential
opportunity to be selected to build out the full
constellation, which would foresee a large number of
satellites.
The Company will lead a
consortium of major industry players for the
contract, including ESSP (European Satellite
Services Provider), a leading space-based
Communication, Navigation and Surveillance (CNS)
services provider.
Today, surveillance systems
often rely on self-reported positions of aircraft,
which are derived from GNSS satellites. The need for
an additional complementary space solution will
provide a fully reliable and resilient surveillance
solution completing the European CNS infrastructure.
By independently verifying the location of a plane
through geolocation MLAT technology, the EURIALO
project will provide the most advanced and reliable
system for aircraft surveillance, with the ability
to track a plane in real time from takeoff to
landing anywhere in the world. The project aligns
with the forward-look strategy of the European Air
Traffic Management (ATM) Master Plan, which outlines
the need for resilient, space-based infrastructure
to support safe, sustainable and efficient air
travel.
“Space-based aircraft tracking
and geolocation is the future of air traffic
management to ensure safe, secure and sustainable
air travel at a global scale,” said Peter Platzer,
CEO, Spire Global. “We are honored to be selected by
ESA to lead the development of this
first-of-its-kind aviation surveillance system
demonstrator, leveraging our more than 500 years of
flight heritage operating satellites in space and
expertise in radio frequency technology.”
“ESA has a long track record of
supporting companies that use satellites to improve
aviation safety, security and sustainability,
ensuring European autonomy and improving the lives
of European citizens by creating jobs and
prosperity,” said Javier Benedicto, acting director
of Connectivity and Secure Communications at ESA.
“We are proud to partner with Spire Global with its
strong heritage to develop a best-in-class satellite
system design to demonstrate a system that will
revolutionise air traffic management and
surveillance for safer skies.”
The EURIALO project is mainly
funded through the German Space Agency at DLR.
Spire, through its newly established German
subsidiary, will open an office in Munich,
strengthening the small satellite segment in
Germany. The office will expand the Company’s
geographic footprint to nine offices across six
countries.
“This project will contribute
to safer, and more efficient and sustainable air
traffic. Addressing the small satellite market will
further boost our industrial base in Germany. Small
satellites in near Earth orbit offer a wealth of
opportunities for innovative solutions to our
real-world needs,” said Fabienne Spreen, German
Space Agency at DLR, advisor to the German ESA
delegation.
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