D-Orbit sets course to expand beyond space transportation services
Date:
Tue, 15 Apr 2025 22:16:40 +0000
Description:
Italian company D-Orbit has been launching customer payloads aboard its  Orbital Transfer Vehicles (OTVs) for The post D-Orbit sets course to expand  beyond space transportation services appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Italian company D-Orbit has been launching customer payloads aboard its  Orbital Transfer Vehicles (OTVs) for the past five years. In that time, the  company has positioned itself as a reliable space transportation provider and  hosting platform. 
The company now plans to extend into on-orbit servicing and refueling  missions, end-of-mission disposal, and cross-orbit transportation, including  to lunar orbits. NSF spoke with the companys VP of Business Development,  Stefano Antonetti, about D-Orbits plans to expand from movers to maintainers  as it continues to build Europes future in space. 
 
People are starting to see space as an extension of their reach, something  they can actually access, says Antonetti, and, as a space enthusiast, this is  something that Im really proud to contribute to. 
The team has flown 17 missions since its inaugural launch in September 2020,  delivering more than 180 payloads for customers. D-Orbit missions have flown  aboard each of SpaceXs Transporter missions to date. Two separate D-Orbit  missions, Ascend and Endless Sky were lofted together on the Transporter 12  mission, while January 2023s Starfield mission hitched a ride on the Starlink  Group 2-6 launch. Vega launches D-Orbits first Origin mission in September  2020 (Credit: ESA) 
The company has predominantly flown aboard Falcon 9 vehicles, starting with  its second mission, Pulse , in January 2021 aboard Transporter 1. D-Orbit 
made its 2020 debut atop a Vega, launching from the Guiana Space Center in  Kourou  this was the rockets successful return to flight after a failure the  previous summer. 
Founded in 2011, the company is 14 years old and has offices in Italy,  Portugal, and the UK, while a new US team will focus on bus design and  manufacturing. A champion of conducting environment-friendly business, 
D-Orbit also has the accolade of being the first space company in the world 
to be certified B-Corp. 
D-Orbit describes itself as a space logistics company, and the initial  business model was one of debris mitigation, hence the company name. The  initial product was dubbed the Deorbit Kit and included a propulsive module  with its own control unit that could be added to a customers satellite or  spacecraft. This independent device would monitor the host crafts orbit and  then activate when the craft either reached its planned end of life or in the  event of a failure, such as it becoming unresponsive. Performing a propulsive  decommissioning maneuver, the kit would safely deorbit the craft, thus  mitigating orbital debris. 
 
D-Orbit led a consortium including ArianeGroup, Airbus, and others to develop  a solution with funding from the European Space Agencys (ESA) Space Safety  Programme. A validation mission was launched aboard a Vega rockets Vega  Secondary Payload Adapter (VESPA), which would usually remain in orbit. The  kit successfully performed a controlled propulsive re-entry maneuver 
following payload deployment. 
The market, however, was not as reactive to the product as D-Orbit had  expected. Although its an urgency, its still not a big market, Antonetti  explains. The company pivoted, looking to the wider field of space  transportation and logistics  such as last-mile transportation in low-Earth  orbit (LEO) and in-orbit servicing. Anything that can help anyone to succeed  in space, he continues. There will be many businesses starting to happen in  space, and the best way to leverage this expansion of the space economy is to  provide them [with] services. 
 Ion spacecraft 
Key to delivering these services is the companys Ion spacecraft  a form of 
OTV also known as a space tug. Three of these craft have already de-orbited,  leaving 14 still currently in space. We have a lot of fuel and we carefully  plan our re-entry, Antonetti notes. We dont want to generate additional waste  in space. Rendering of the Ion spacecraft deploying a payload (Credit:  D-Orbit) 
The company identified a niche in the last-mile aspect of the emerging space  transportation market. SpaceX was coming and there were starting to be a lot  of rideshare launches, so we knew there would be a lot of low-cost launches  but in very specific places in outer space, says Antonetti. 
Those satellites, especially CubeSats, would have needed a lot of propulsion  to go where they needed to go. For instance, SpaceX launches go [to] SSO  around 500 kilometers but some customers need to go a little bit below or a  little bit higher. We can put them on different altitudes, usually plus or  minus 150 kilometers  its not much but we can go much farther. We can go up 
to 1,200 kilometers. The two key maneuvers that operators frequently request  are a change of altitude, or the true anomaly  an angular parameter 
describing where an object is along its orbital path. 
The Ion carrier is already on its second generation and the company is  developing the third, which will be capable of a wider range of orbits and  will be almost twice the size of the current model. The carrier is powered by  chemical, rather than electric ion propulsion, despite the name, which is an  acronym for In Orbit Now. It will, however, carry two of Magdrives Rogue  electric propulsion systems for an in-orbit demonstration mission this June.  The thruster employs a solid metal propellant, which is ionized into plasma  using internally stored energy, delivering high thrust and specific impulse. 
D-Orbits hosted payload service accounts for roughly half of its revenue and  provides hardware developers with a plug-and-play platform to get their  payloads into orbit for testing or verification. Ion handles resources such 
as power, data uplinking, and downlinking, with standardized data, 
electrical, and mechanical interfaces. Already launching multiple times per  year, the company can offer its customers flexible transportation options 
into Sun-synchronous orbits (SSO) and geostationary orbits (GEO) as well as 
to LEO. Ion SCV-001 Laurentius prepares to launch to space aboard Transporter  1 in January 2021 (Credit: D-Orbit) 
Usually, the deployment of satellites takes three to six months, depending on  customer needs, notes Antonetti. But during and after, we carry a lot of  experiments and in-orbit validations. Reaching the maturity of a product is  super important in space, to demonstrate that your product is viable. Theres  not many opportunities for developers in the space industry to test in a  quick, affordable, and repetitive way  we are one of those platforms that can  do that. 
Customers are increasingly showing interest in running the hosted payloads as  an operational mission, rather than building their own satellite. That, of  course, is a big advantage for the customer, he continues. Yes, you lose a  little bit of flexibility, because you dont have your own spacecraft, but on  the other side you dont have to actually spend a lot of money to build and  develop your own, so its a trade-off. 
Ion fits comfortably inside the Falcon 9 but is too large for many of the  smaller micro-launchers in the market, some of which offer similar services.  D-Orbit is, nonetheless, in conversation with these other launch providers,  especially as some have larger rockets on their roadmaps. Rides are also  booked in the future with fellow European company PLD Space on its MIURA 5, 
as part of a recently signed agreement covering equatorial launches. 
Rendering of Gea deploying a customer payload in GEO (Credit: D-Orbit) 
 Gea spacecraft 
A new tug, named Gea is also in the works which will be ten times larger than  Ion. Its name is an abbreviation of Geostationary Extension Assistant. The  craft will introduce in-orbit services such as life extension or the  relocation of assets, while still delivering payloads to GEO or even into  lunar orbit. We are trying, step by step, to develop this family of carriers  to cover most of the environment between the Earth and the Moon, and then  potentially beyond adds Antonetti. See Also Falcon Missions Forum ESA Forum  section European spaceflight articles Click here to join L2 
Last year D-Orbit signed a 20 million contract with ESA to develop this new  carrier platform  the largest of its kind for commercial missions in Europe.  Gea will be able to capture and dock with another spacecraft in GEO, and  transport payloads from geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) to GEO or lunar  orbit. The latter is not yet a big market commercially but the company has  identified an institutional demand for it and is positioning itself to be 
able to deliver that service by the end of 2026. 
Similarly, the market for tugs refueling other craft is in its infancy but is  certainly an area where the company sees potential, and Gea is designed to be  refilled from the outset. Gea will complement Ion with its larger payload  capacity, additional capabilities, and higher delta-V. Inevitably D-Orbits  spacecraft family will grow further but, for now, the pair will give its  customers a good cross-orbit coverage. We are pretty set for the next three 
to four years, Antonetti says. 
We are monitoring very carefully the evolution of the launcher market because  its not easy to predict. We are betting that the launch cost will decrease in  the future because it looks like its the general trend. To diversify us from  the micro-launchers market, we prefer to grow in size and provide additional  services. We try to differentiate ourselves through reliability. Rendering of  Gea docking with another satellite in orbit (Credit: D-Orbit) 
 Key missions 
The Ion spacecraft performed an in-orbit rendezvous in April 2024 during its  sixth mission which had launched the year before aboard Transporter 8 in June  2023. The collaboration with Starfish Space was intended to demonstrate  autonomous satellite servicing capabilities in which its Otter Pup would  approach the Ion craft. However, A software anomaly on Launchers OTV, which  carried Otter Pup, led to an emergency deployment of Otter Pup which began  spinning at 330 degrees per second. 
Despite managing to stabilize the craft, a thruster failure then prevented 
the craft from proceeding with its planned approach. Instead, the Ion craft  maneuvered towards it, closing the distance between the pair to approximately  one kilometer  all captured by Otter Pups onboard cameras. It was an  incredible mission because both companies could test some of their  capabilities, notes Antonetti. For us, it was basically a rendezvous with a  virtual object. We were at the right place at the right moment and [anyone]  who knows about space knows that its not trivial to do this kind of mission. 
D-Orbit has taken the opportunity to test new subsystems on board Ion as it  reaches the end of its own missions, testing maneuvers or different  operational profiles that would perhaps be too risky during its operational  life. This knowledge, built over the past four years, is now being 
transferred directly into the Gea platform. NOX passes qualification testing  and integration at the Centrotecnica facility (Credit: D-Orbit) 
NOX is a forthcoming Earth observation program using a spacecraft that is  heavily based on Ion. Designed with a five-year lifespan, this mission is  Antonettis favorite to date. Overseen by ESA and initiated by Italys National  Recovery and Resilience Plan (PNRR), the project was an opportunity to push  the boundaries of Ions capability. D-Orbit has partnered with synthetic  aperture radar (SAR) specialists MetaSensing for the project. Using its  technology, NOX will deliver imaging performance with sub-meter ground  resolution, using a 3.2 m deployable RF-TX antenna. 
NOX is part of the IRIDE program  a 26-million satellite contract including  ground operations infrastructure and the potential for an additional SAR  satellite, worth 24 million. The program will use various technologies  including microwave and optical imaging, and will launch the first of its  constellation in 2026. The European launcher that will loft the mission,  potentially one of the Vega family, has yet to be confirmed. 
We developed this 500-kilogram spacecraft and are starting to build the 
flight model, says Antonetti. The project has been challenging for the team,  with a demanding time constraint  a little over two years to develop and 
adapt Ion for a new purpose and be ready to launch it in the middle of next  year. 
Ions cylindrical structure makes it more efficient for missions such as this,  as it allows integrating or changing modules late into the mission  preparation. We changed some modules that were malfunctioning a few days  before launch and, because everything was outside the principal body of the  spacecraft, its more efficient structurally. Its not that efficient in terms  of space  you dont occupy all the volume you have, but for a space carrier, 
we think its pretty efficient! Rendering of ESAs RISE in-orbit servicing  mission in which D-Orbit and Eutelsat will collaborate in GEO (Credit: ESA) 
D-Orbit is, similarly, in conversation with other potential partners who are  developing capsules that might one day return a customer payload to Earth,  rather than moving into this field itself. Offering return journeys as part 
of the wider space transportation offer is not yet on the companys roadmap 
but the business model is being explored. Complexities include being able to  predict and control where the capsule will return with reasonable certainty. 
D-Orbit missions follow a sequential numbering nomenclature such as ION-SCV  016, where SCV translates to Space Carrier Vessel, taking some inspiration  from the naming of naval vessels and classes. Each craft also has a more  playful name that honors a member of the D-Orbit team, such as Eclectic Elena  and Marvelous Mathias . The names of employees are drawn from a box and  Antonetti is looking forward to his turn in about six flights time. Its nice  to have your name in space, he adds, and I think its everyones dream to have  your own spacecraft. It was a very good idea, we are pretty proud of it. 
Each mission also has its own name, such as Wish upon a Star and Endless Sky  which are the two most recent. These missions become your baby, he explains,  and each has a story of its own that develops over the months between  conception to launch, so it feels appropriate to give each of them a name. We  are very proud of our babies, and their path to the stars, he adds. Falcon  upper stage deploys Ion on its 17th orbital transportation mission on March  14, 2025 (center, top) (Credit: SpaceX) 
 The future 
Demand has steadily increased since D-Orbits first mission five years ago. 
The rising number of companies looking to test their technology in orbit will  eventually lead to a better supply chain, from which everyone will benefit,  Antonetti observes. If you work in space, its because you are a space  enthusiast or passionate [about] space, so you want to see everyone succeed,  he says. The reason we are developing our spacecraft almost vertically is  because the supply chain isnt that ready in Europe  we are [still] getting to  that point. 
Acutely aware of the need to operate profitably, D-Orbit is also mindful of  the need to do so ethically and sustainably. We are in a very privileged  position, Antonetti points out, noting that our generation will be forever  remembered in history as the one that made it possible to live, and work,  beyond Earth. We have a responsibility to use this natural resource, which is  space, in a sustainable way that us [sic], as the first generation of people  learning how to live in space, will pass this message to the following  generation. This is something that motivates my colleagues every day to do  their job well. 
 (Lead image: Rendering of the Gea spacecraft repositioning an asset in 
orbit. Credit: D-Orbit) 
 
The post D-Orbit sets course to expand beyond space transportation services  appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/04/d-orbit-interview/
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