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Forecast International Projects 50 Billion Dollar ELV Market

Revenues for commercial launches have risen steadily since 2005, with Europe garnering the lion's share of the global market. U.S. commercial launch revenues for 2007 were estimated to be $150 million and European revenues were about $840 million, according to FAA statistics.
by Staff Writers
Newtown CT (SPX) Aug 21, 2008
Forecast International is projecting that over the next decade, launch vehicle providers worldwide will produce 636 expendable launch vehicles (ELVs) worth approximately $48 billion. The expendable launch vehicles to be produced will range in size from the smaller European Vega to the Heavy-Lift U.S. Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles.

These are among the findings of FI's recent analysis, "The Market for Expendable Launch Vehicles." According to the report, governments continue to be the prevailing customer of the launch industry, accounting for 66 percent of the total global launches in 2007. This trend will continue in the decades to come.

"The anticipated resurgence in demand for both geosynchronous and non-geosynchronous satellite communications capacity and continued substantial government demand indicate that despite razor-thin profit margins, the world market for expendable launch vehicles is headed for a considerable market upturn," said John Edwards, Forecast International senior analyst and author of the study.

Revenues for commercial launches have risen steadily since 2005, with Europe garnering the lion's share of the global market. U.S. commercial launch revenues for 2007 were estimated to be $150 million and European revenues were about $840 million, according to FAA statistics.

These are positive indicators for the ELV industry, and Forecast International's analysis of the world satellite market indicates an increased launch tempo in the near term.

A slight rebound in the commercial satellite market seems to be under way, but, as in the past, launch providers will do well by lofting an unprecedented catalog of military, civil, and scientific spacecraft for operators spanning the globe.

In the United States, the military satellite market is vigorous as it meets the needs of the various transformational efforts under way. There seems to be a never-ending list of programs that are planning launches throughout the decade. United Launch Alliance - a tie up of Lockheed Martin and Boeing's launch operations - will be the direct beneficiary of the full military satellite manifest in the U.S.

"While the level of military satellite production in Europe will remain in sharp contrast to that of the United States, there will still be plenty of contracts out there for the Ariane 5 and the upcoming Vega," according to Edwards.

The analysis projects that in terms of the countries producing these ELVs, the United States is expected to account for 161 units; Russian, Ukrainian, and Chinese production through 2017 should amount to approximately 306 units.

However, even at a nearly double unit output, Russian, Ukrainian, and Chinese value of production will account for $15.9 billion, whereas U.S. production of 145 fewer units is expected to be valued at $17.9 billion.

This disparity can be attributed to high-ticket ELVs in the U.S., such as the Atlas V, Delta IV, and Ares I. Production coming from India, Japan, and Israel will total approximately 73 units, and Europe is expected to roll out 92 ELVs during the same period.

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Successful Launch For Third Inmarsat-4 Satellite
Baikonur, Kazakhstan (SPX) Aug 20, 2008
Inmarsat (has confirmed the successful launch and acquisition of the third Inmarsat-4 satellite. The satellite was launched on a Proton Breeze M rocket from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 11:43pm BST on 18 August (4:43am 19th August, local time).







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