Luxembourg's Ministry of the Economy and the Luxembourg Space Agency (LSA) have announced the launch of the first high-performance microsatellite of its kind, produced and assembled in the Grand Duchy.
The ESAIL microsatellite for tracking ships worldwide, developed under the European Space Agency's (ESA) Partnership Projects programme, launched last night aboard an Arianespace Vega from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. ESAIL is the first satellite of its kind produced and assembled in Luxembourg by the company LuxSpace, involving a large number of European small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), with the support of the LSA and other ESA member states.
ESAIL was one of 53 satellites on Arianespace's rideshare adapter for Small Satellites Mission Service and was deployed into a Sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of more than 500 km. The microsatellite will track ships worldwide by detecting messages that ships radio-broadcast with their automatic identification systems (AIS).
As part of Canadian operator exactEarth's satellite-based automatic identification systems (SAT-AIS) constellation, ESAIL will provide ship data to the European Maritime Safety Agency for the next generation of global maritime traffic services. This enables fisheries monitoring, fleet management, environmental protection and security monitoring for maritime and government authorities and industry.
ESAIL was developed in an ESA Partnership Project with LuxSpace and ExactEarth as part of ESA's SAT-AIS programme. It is the third AIS satellite for LuxSpace, but also the largest so far. The company is currently developing a multi‐purpose, modular platform called Triton‐X. This platform will build on the manufacturing and testing heritage gained by LuxSpace through ESAIL, using off-the-shelf components to deliver a fully-fledged satellite within months.
Jochen Harms, Managing Director at LuxSpace, commented: "ESAIL is a major milestone for us. It enabled us to build and integrate a sophisticated microsatellite using commercial off-the-shelf components, which reduced the time for testing and launch qualification. The emerged synergies paved our way towards commercial space. We have gained valuable experience and knowledge through ESAIL, which serve as inputs for the Triton‐X platform".
Marc Serres, chief executive of the LSA, added: "As a European leader in commercial space, Luxembourg is following a unique space strategy focused on creating an attractive ecosystem for NewSpace companies and innovative space entrepreneurs. This maritime microsatellite built in Luxembourg by our major system integrator LuxSpace, in partnership with ESA, demonstrates how a private company and ESA can work closely together to develop a new commercial product".
Magali Vaissiere, Director of Telecommunications and Integrated Applications at ESA, concluded: "The successful launch of ESAIL illustrates ESA's capacity to manage microsatellites, adapting some innovative approaches of NewSpace. ESA's Partnership Projects federate industry around sustainable end-to-end systems up to in-orbit validation, achieving competitive leaps forward and economic impacts. They help to de-risk partners' investments to answer market needs, and maximise the benefits to industry, thanks to ESA's efficient co-management approach tailored to commercial best practices".