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ID094102
Title ProperObservations on the evolution of satellite launch volume and cyclicality in the space industry
LanguageENG
AuthorHiriart, Thomas ;  Saleh, Joseph H
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Satellites have been rightly described as the lifeblood of the entire space industry and the number of satellites ordered or launched per year is an important defining metric of the industry's level of activity, such that trends and variability in this volume have significant strategic impact on the space industry. Over the past 40+ years, hundreds of satellites have been launched every year. Thus an important dataset is available for time series analysis and identification of trends and cycles in the various markets of the space industry. This article reports findings of a study for which we collected data on over 6000 satellites launched since 1960 on a yearly basis. We grouped the satellites into three broad categories - defense and intelligence, science, and commercial satellites - and identified and discussed the main trends and cyclical patterns for each of these. Institutional customers (defense and intelligence, and science) accounted for over two-thirds of all satellites launched within our time period (1960-2008), and, in the 1960s and 1970s, they accounted for 90% and 73.5%, respectively. A fair conclusion from this data is that the space industry was enabled by, and grew because of the institutional customers, not commercial market forces. However, when the launch data is examined more closely, a growing influence of the commercial sector is noticeable. Over the past two decades communication satellites accounted for roughly half of all launches, thus reflecting an important shift in the space industry in which the commercial sector is playing an equal role (on a launch volume basis) to that of the institutional market. Cyclical patterns in the satellite launch volume over the past decade are separately discussed before we sum up with a conclusion.
`In' analytical NoteSpace Policy Vol. 26, No. 1; Feb 2010: p.53-60
Journal SourceSpace Policy Vol. 26, No. 1; Feb 2010: p.53-60
Key WordsSpace Industry ;  Satellites - Defense and Intelligence ;  Space ;  Commercial Satellites


 
 
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