- Astrium the global market leader in commercial
telecommunication satellites since 2006 – over 35 % of added value
created in Germany
- Supply contract signed with medium-sized enterprise
- 250th solar panel produced for Astrium Eurostar satellite
Ottobrunn is where Astrium has concentrated
significant parts of its German telecommunications business – including
both system management and the development and manufacture of satellite
equipment, subsystems and components. The new satellite-based military
telecommunication system developed for the Bundeswehr, SatComBw Stage
2, is also being managed in Ottobrunn. Moreover, the site’s competence
centre for solar generators and its ultra-modern antenna test facility
play a leading role in the highly competitive global space market.
“The economic added value of public technology funding and
research is particularly evident in the field of satellite-based
telecommunications,” says Astrium CEO Evert Dudok.
Every euro invested in this area returns at least ten euros to the
economic cycle, he states, the majority of this added value actually
being generated outside spaceflight itself, for instance through
services and terminal equipment.
Astrium has an approximately 30 percent share in
the global market for telecommunications satellites, Dudok continues,
which has made it the world leader on the market in recent years. “At
least 35 percent of each of Astrium’s telecommunications satellites
comes from Germany. This provides work for some 1400 employees at
Astrium’s German sites and at our subsidiary Tesat in Backnang.”
Dudok praised the high level of competence of all the engineers
involved and stressed the importance of recruiting new engineers for
the site in Ottobrunn.
On the occasion of Hintze’s visit, Astrium
announced the signing of a supplier contract with Azur Space, a
medium-sized company based in Heilbronn, which will be in charge of
delivering ultra-high-power gallium arsenide solar cells to Ottobrunn
for its production up until 2011. The contract is worth a total of 75
million euros. Satellites have a varying demand for solar cells,
reaching from 800 units (for small satellites) to 30,000 units for
large telecommunications satellites such as the Alphabus. Astrium’s
solar generators are more powerful than their present terrestrial
counterparts by a factor of 2.6 under comparable operating conditions.
At present, Astrium’s solar generator centre is
manufacturing its 250th panel for an Astrium communication satellite
belonging to the Eurostar series. A Eurostar E 3000 needs ten such
panels on its two deployable wings. The panels are about 4 x 2.3 metres
large. So far, Astrium has received orders for 25 Eurostar satellites,
13 of which are already at work in space.