UrtheCast Announces the Signing of a Contract exceeding $100M for the Delivery of a SAR-XL Satellite as an “Accelerator Mission” for the OptiSAR™ Constellation.
Snipit from SpaceNews: UrtheCast will build a standalone radar satellite for an unnamed customer, pushing back a planned constellation. UrtheCast said this week that the unidentified customer signed a contract valued at more than $78 million for a single synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite. A second customer is in negotiations with UrtheCast for a similar deal. If the second deal is concluded, the two SAR satellites would launch together in 2021. That would delay the company’s OptiSAR constellation of eight high-resolution optical-imaging satellites and eight SAR satellites by at least a year, to 2023, but also reduce technical and financial risks for that system. [SpaceNews]
Company Release (Wire) – 08/14/2017 16:00

VANCOUVER, Aug. 14, 2017 /CNW/ – UrtheCast Corp. (TSX:UR) (the “Company”) announced today that it has entered into a contract with a confidential customer for the development and delivery of a dual-frequency stand-alone Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) operational-class satellite as an “accelerator” for the OptiSARTM Constellation.  The exact amount of the contract is not being disclosed at this time for confidentiality and competitive reasons, but the Company can confirm that it is a substantial contract worth in excess of one hundred million Canadian dollars.  The contract is for the delivery of the SAR spacecraft, key elements of the ground segment, namely the mission control and planning system and the SAR processor, and in-orbit operations support, but does not include the price of the launch or insurance (which are the customer’s responsibilities).  This confidential customer has previously signed an MOU with the Company for the OptiSAR Constellation.

The contract is subject to the customer obtaining final government appropriation approval and to UrtheCast and its suppliers obtaining technology transfer export permits on terms agreeable to the customer.  Subject to these conditions being met, work on the program is anticipated to begin in early 2018, for launch in late 2020. Payments by the customer to UrtheCast under the contract are conditional on the Company successfully reaching various program delivery milestones.  As part of the deliverables under the contract, UrtheCast has also agreed to provide elements of the satellite ground segment and post-launch maintenance and operational support, each to be further detailed and extended in separate definitive contracts.

Using the same SAR technology that the Company has been developing for the OptiSAR constellation, this contract will allow UrtheCast to accelerate both the operationalization of its SAR technology and the start of our SAR data services business.  The contract enables the Company to build and launch a SAR satellite as a precursor mission (or “accelerator”) to the OptiSAR Constellation and to thereby demonstrate its high-capacity, high-throughput, fully-operational class capability with an unprecedented range of imaging modes and scientific-grade data quality.  Under the contract, the parties have agreed to enter into a separate definitive contract to provide UrtheCast with the exclusive commercial distribution rights to the customer’s unused satellite imaging capacity outside specified regions on a shared 50/50 net revenue basis, allowing the Company to sell the SAR-XL data and SAR-derived services in advance of the deployment of the OptiSAR constellation—the date of which is now pushed out by at least a year.

“This contract is a big win and a huge opportunity for us,” stated UrtheCast’s President and CEO, Wade Larson. “The execution of the accelerator program will demonstrate to prospective OptiSAR customers that the technology is build-ready and give them the confidence that we are able to carry out programs of this scale.  Building and delivering this accelerator SAR satellite will validate our technology, substantially reduce our financial, programmatic and operational risks, and get us into the business of selling SAR-XL data sooner than we were anticipating.  Subject to final approvals, we’ll soon be customer-funded to build our first operational-class SAR mission.”

As previously disclosed, UrtheCast believes its SAR technology, for which it has filed multiple patents, will be the world’s first “5th Generation” space-borne SAR technology.  Both multi-frequency and fully-digital, the Company’s SAR technology allows for significant operational flexibility.  With six independent apertures, the accelerator SAR satellite is expected to be the first SAR satellite ever to fly more than two independent apertures.  Having six apertures will provide several advantages over existing systems, including improved data quality and spotlight-class higher resolution in full stripmap mode, which enables significantly more coverage capability at high resolution than is currently commercially available.

The Company today is also disclosing that the OptiSAR technology, which is now in its third design iteration, could be configured in future missions to image simultaneously in three bands (for example, X, S, and L), which is believed to be another world’s-first achievement and is covered in our patent filings.

Funding for the development of UrtheCast’s SAR technology has to date come from our own funds and from our customers, including the Government of Canada:  the Canadian Space Agency (CSA), the Department of National Defence (DND), and Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED).

By SAR

Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) or SAR Journal is an industry trade journal which tracks the worldwide SAR industry. We offer news, education, and insights to the SAR industry. We are operated, moderated and maintained by members of the SAR community.This profile is run by multiple moderators who all represent the SyntheticApertureRadar.com If you would like to submit news or have questions about a post please email us here: SyntheticApertureRadarmag@gmail.com and someone will get back to you.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *