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Space
Space
Science
Andrew Jones

European Space Agency launches competition to find its next commercial rocket by 2028

A graphic with three v-shapes flying around earth above the words "european launcher challenge".

The European Space Agency has kicked off a competition to support the development of new launch vehicles and boost Europe's access to space.

The agency issued the call for proposals for the European Launcher Challenge (ELC) on Monday, March 24. Companies have just six weeks to submit their proposals, with a deadline of May 5, with up to 169 million euros ($183 million) to be made available to each selected launcher.

ESA and Europe are currently served by the Ariane 6 and Vega rockets, but the agency is opening up launches to competition from new companies in response to the global trend of new and reusable commercial launch vehicles cutting the cost of launch.

"The European Launcher Challenge is a two-stage competitive tender to select a number of European launch services," ESA said in a statement announcing the challenge. The ELC is open to companies based in ESA or European Union member states.

Component A is for launch services for ESA and other European institutional customers across 2026 to 2030, while component B calls for a "launch service capacity upgrade demonstration" that will require the upgraded launcher to fly by 2028. Companies must submit proposals covering both components.

There are already a variety of emerging launch vehicles in Europe which have been working towards their first orbital launches and are likely already well-positioned to enter the contest.

In January, a number of companies — Rocket Factory Augsburg, Latitude, HyImpulse, MaiaSpace, Orbex and The Exploration Company — published an open letter to ESA ahead of its finalizing of the details of the ELC. The letter called for substantial funding and access to launch pads at the European spaceport in French Guiana, South America.

Other European launch companies likely to be in the mix include PLD Space of Spain, Skyrora from the United Kingdom, and Germany's Isar Aerospace, whose first Spectrum rocket currently sits on the pad at Norway's Andøya Spaceport with a launch attempt planned for March 28.

Europe is set to see its demand for launch services grow. Guillaume de la Brosse, head of the unit in charge of Space Policy at the European Commission, said in November that the European Union will be launching more satellites due to projects like the IRIS² (Infrastructure for Resilience, Interconnectivity and Security by Satellite) communications constellation.

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