Technology & Innovation

Duke of York visits Harwell Campus Space Cluster

Published by
Nicky Godding

Five Space companies pioneering the latest space hardware, robotics and technology shared their growth and partnership milestones with The Duke of York alongside investors, industry leaders at the Harwell Campus New Space Showcase.

According to Angus Horner, Director and Shareholder of the Harwell Campus Partnership: “We already manufacture over 40 per cent of the world's small satellites and 25 per cent of the world's telecommunications satellites."

Members of the Harwell Space Cluster - Rezatec, Open Cosmos, Effective Space and Oxford Space Systems, alongside European leaders Thales Alenia Space - were part of an 80-strong group of private, public and academic organisations focused on democratising the space market and supporting the UK Space Sector as it aims for a ten per cent share of the global market by 2030.

These companies are addressing some of the greatest global challenges for space: developing new advanced antennas and satellite solutions to reduce the cost and time it takes for new companies to break into the space market; significantly extending the life of ageing satellites in orbit; and using data from satellites to enable countries to achieve better crop yields and manage water supplies to avoid drought.

Conventional satellites are the size of a double decker bus and cost billions. Now companies such as Oxford Space Systems are capable of producing satellites the size of a washing machine or microwave.

The five announcements (see below) were made at the Harwell Space Cluster’s ‘New Space’ Showcase where His Royal Highness The Duke of York marked the event with the first deployment of Oxford Space Systems’ newest antenna targeted at earth observation satellite constellations.

There is a unique ecosystem at the Harwell Campus which is helping start-ups and scale-ups grow rapidly with support from organisations such as the Science and Technology Facilities Council’s RAL Space facility, the European Space Agency and its Business Incubation Centre, the Satellite Applications Catapult and the UK Space Agency.

The Space Cluster is attracting significant private investment into the UK’s space sector, with venture capitalist and private wealth funding focusing on companies at Harwell Campus.

Ed Stacey, IQ Capital Partners LLP said: ”Historically, space technology has been one of the higher risk sectors for venture capitalists, as the length of the innovation cycle made it more difficult to realise strong returns. More recently, we've seen this innovation cycle shrinking, enabling much greater returns. This makes the space sector of increasing interest to UK venture capitalists.

“Harwell Campus is exciting because it’s created a Space Cluster with an ecosystem that attracts the right stakeholders and has world-class facilities to enable innovation in the sector – it’s a very exciting time to be investing."

In 2017 the Government decided to locate the STFC’s RAL Space £99 million National Satellite Testing Facility at Harwell.

Major investment value growth and new jobs creation within the Cluster and across the whole of Harwell Campus is twinned with substantial physical expansion, enabled by investment from the shareholders in the Campus Partnership: United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, STFC, Harwell Oxford Partners and U+I, along with debt capital from Santander.

Angus Horner, Director and Shareholder of the Harwell Campus Partnership said: “"The UK already manufactures over 40 per cent of the world's small satellites and 25 percent of the world's telecommunications satellites."

"We’ve created a place that has all the components for technology companies’ fast growth major research infrastructure, private investment capital, exceptionally talented and ambitious people, plus flexible commercial accommodation."

Dr Barbara Ghinelli, Director, Harwell Campus and Cluster Development at STFC, said: “Harwell is a campus of national and international importance and its space cluster is an ideal mix of organisations."

 

Rezatec:

  • Rezatec and Eden Project partnership secures ESA funding to promote benefits of Earth Observation data for small-scale land owners.
  • Rezatec launches mobile app helping Mexican farmers improve sugar cane and wheat yield through the analysis of satellite data; supported UK Space Agency’s International Partnership Programme (IPP).

 

Thales Alenia Space:

  • Introduces Skimsat, the new breakthrough concept for reducing the cost of Earth observing satellites without compromising performance by lowering the operational altitude. Skimsat is a small satellite set to become the new normal solution for Earth observing missions.

 

Open Cosmos:

  • Announcing a collaboration between Open Cosmos and the Satellite Applications Catapult to deliver IOD-6, a new mission opportunity on a 6U CubeSat platform. IOD-6 is part of the UK’s In-Orbit Demonstration Programme designed to lower the cost and time of access to space and enable companies to bring satellite-based products and services to market faster.  The new mission is supported by a £700,000 grant from the UK Space Agency.

 

Effective Space:

  • Pioneering last mile logistics in space. Effective Space to collaborate with leading space startups and Harwell Space Cluster members to advance in-orbit servicing. Recently awarded a $100 million contract with a major regional satellite operator, its SPACE DRONE™ spacecraft can extend the life of ageing satellites by as much as 15 years

 

Oxford Space Systems:

  • Oxford Space Systems secures £6.7m in funding; IQ Capital, Longwall Ventures, Midven and Wren Capital invest in the leading innovator of deployable space antennas and structures for the New Space age.
Nicky Godding

Nicky Godding is editor of The Business Magazine. Before her journalism career, she worked mainly in public relations moving into writing when she was invited to launch Retail Watch, a publication covering retail and real estate across Europe. After some years of constant travelling, she tucked away her passport and concentrated on business writing, co-founding a successful regional business magazine. She has interviewed some of the UK’s most successful entrepreneurs who have built multi-million-pound businesses and reported on many science and technology firsts. She reports on the region’s thriving business economy from start-ups, family businesses and multi-million-pound corporations, to the professionals that support their growth and the institutions that educate the next generation of business leaders.

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