USGIF - GEOINT - Banner

D-Orbit signs €2,2 million space debris removal contract with ESA

Image: D-Orbit

Edinburgh, 9 September 2021. – The UK branch of D-Orbit signed a € 2,197 million contract with ESA for phase 1 of the development and in-orbit validation of a “Deorbit Kit”, D-Orbit said.

The agreement is part of ESA’s Space Safety Programme.

The decommissioning kit is a self-contained suite of equipment that can be used with space vehicles of any size. The bespoke kit enables spacecraft to perform a propulsive decommissioning manoeuvre when their mission is over. It can also be used in case of spacecraft failure, even if it has become unresponsive. The kit and the know-how developed will be used in the future for in-orbit installation on satellites already in space, D-Orbit said.

The company will lead a consortium including Airbus Defence and Space, ArianeGroup, GMV Innovating Solutions, and Optimal Structural Solutions to develop the multi-purpose kit. The Deorbit Kit will initially be installed on VESPA (Vega Secondary Payload Adapter), a Vega Rocket payload adapter. It will be expected to perform a propulsive direct re-entry manoeuvre after the rocket has deployed its payload.

The first phase of development for the device is the designing of VESPA´s upper part. This apparatus might become the launch adaptor for ESA’s ClearSpace-1 mission scheduled for 2025.

Check Also

Space Cafe Geopolitics “33 minutes with Dr Jessica West” on nukes in space, 2024 edition

This Space Café Geopolitics will feature Dr Jessica West, Senior Researcher at Project Ploughshares, in conversation with Torsten Kriening, Publisher of SpaceWatch.Global. Nukes in Space, a 2024 edition and an analysis of the Russian veto at the UN Security Council. Last week, Wednesday 24 April 2024, Russia vetoed the UN Security Council’s resolution to reaffirm the Outer Space Treaty’s ban on weapons of mass destruction in space crafted by the US and Japan. That veto was set in the same week that at UN COPUOS in Vienna the Legal Subcommittee had their 63th session.