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Astroscale awarded grant From to commercialize active debris removal services by Staff Writers Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Jan 24, 2020
Astroscale has been awarded a grant of up to US $4.5 million from the Tokyo Metropolitan Government's "Innovation Tokyo Project" to build a roadmap for commercializing active debris removal (ADR) services. The project, which was launched last year, aims to subsidize up to half of the expenses required for the commercialization and development of innovative services and products for venture companies and small and medium-sized enterprises. Astroscale received the maximum amount covering half of its US $9 million application and will use the funds over three years to commercialize its ADR services and develop global sales channels with satellite operators, national agencies and the insurance market. The grant will also be used to continue pursuing joint research and development contracts, conduct safety and risk assessments of client satellites, and grow the finance and human resources departments. "To address the issue of space debris removal and mitigation it is necessary to both advance innovative technologies and cooperate on policy," said Chris Blackerby, Chief Operating Officer of Astroscale. "The support provided by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government allows us to do both in order to further develop the business case for Astroscale services and build upon the great momentum we have been gaining in maturing the market." In addition to preparing for the launch of its pioneering End-of-Life Services by Astroscale- demonstration (ELSA-d) mission in 2020, Astroscale is also working closely with multiple industry and government representatives to develop standards and best practices for safe and sustainable satellite servicing and debris removal. "As society is increasingly reliant on the orbital environment for satellite services, it is incumbent on all of us in the space sector to create a viable long-term solution to the space debris problem," Blackerby added. "Astroscale is building that viable technical solution through the development of ELSA-d and future debris removal missions."
Russian spy satellite has broken up in space says harvard astronomer Moscow (Sputnik) Jan 14, 2020 Russia launched the Kosmos-2491 military satellite into orbit in 2013, with few details made available regarding its capabilities and mission, leading to speculation about its true purpose. Russia's Kosmos-2491 military satellite may has disintegrated in space, either by accident or after deliberately self-destructing, Harvard-Smithsonian astronomer Jonathan McDowell believes. Earlier, the US Air Force's Project Space Track reported that ten fragments thought to be the remnants of the Kosmos ... read more
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