Investing In Low Earth Orbit Micro-Satellite Telemetry in China

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800px-AEHF_1By Roy K. McCall

China’s LEO (low earth orbit) micro-satellite telemetry market (remote sensing and monitoring with satellites less than 500 kg) could be entering a new phase. With around 100 micro-satellites launched in 2014 with prospects of 150 more in 2015, the micro-satellite market is booming. The telemetry market it serves is growing from around US$ 100 billion in 2014 to over US$ 240 billion by 2020. Over 90 percent is commercial; or in other words, less than 10 percent is aerospace defense dependent.

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LEO refers to satellites 200 km to 1,200 km in above the earth (the International Space Station rises 340 km and the Hubble Telescope 595 km). LEO satellites rotate the earth every 1½ to two or three hours. In contrast, GEO (geosynchronous earth orbit) satellites rise to fixed locations 35,786 km high, to exchange signals with stationary directional antennas.  Each GEO can cover 42 percent of the earth’s surface, but the signal’s round trip take about half a second. 

LEOs avoid the distracting GEO echo effect but require a swarm of satellites to hand off signals to the next orbiting satellite communicating with a stationary earth receiver. Motorola’s Iridium used 66 satellites and Loral’s Globalstar 40 for seamless communication. DARPA (the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) aimed to launch a network of 24 satellites.

Historically, government launched large satellites of less than 500 kg cost around US$ 150 million to build, and another US$ 150 million to launch, excluding insurance. In the past decades, China managed to drop the costs by more than a half. Following that, privatization led by Elon Musk’s SpaceX undercut China by 15 percent or more with its published price of US$ 60-$85 million.

Up to this point, satellite launches still depended on vertical rocket launches. Then along came Swiss Space Systems (S3) with the ability to launch satellites off the back of of an Airbus A330 airplane. Aggregating technology from Europe and Russia (but not the U.S.), the S3 multinational effort is bringing down the micro-satellite launch price tag to around US$ 10 million with prospects of lowering it closer to marginal costs of US$ 1 million, depending on response to competition. The U.S. DARPA is encouraging additional companies (Boeing in conjunction with Amazon’s Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, Virgin Galactic cooperating with Northrup Gruman, and Masten Space System matched with XCOR Aerospace) to build a space plane which can fly Mach10 into lower earth orbit, but it has not yet publicized success. 

Where does this leave China and interested investors? China learned from the bankruptcies two decades earlier of Motorola’s Iridium and Loral’s Globalstar, which since reorganized and are beginning to turn a quarterly profit.

China already has experience launching some Iridium satellites with its Long March rockets. China has a growing drone industry and the government is eager to grow its sophistication in space. 

Satellite launch investors will need to begin discussions with the Civil Aviation Administration of China, which dictates that foreign investors cannot produce aerospace vehicles in China except through co-ventures with AVIC (Aviation Industry Corporation of China which owns XAC/Xi’an Aircraft Corporation) and COMAC (Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China). One likely starting point will be AVIC Sichuan Chengfa Aero Science & Technology Co. The US restricts strategic American aerospace firms from investing advanced space technology in China. Therefore any foreign investors filling technology gaps in China will likely come from Europe and possibly Japan for M2M (machine to machine controlled) space robotics.

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In addition to upstream investors in launch systems and satellite technology, there will be the downstream investors in communication systems. These could easily include anyone with a budget of several million US dollars, compared to billions it would have taken in decades past. Potential buyers of China’s emerging drone launch satellite systems could include leasing companies needing to track mobile equipment, regional air traffic control associations, soil condition and crop yield tracking firms, remote diagnostic healthcare, driverless/pilotless vehicle controllers, and tourism service analytics and monitoring.

As launch costs fall, more micro-satellites will rise to pair growing space telemetry sophistication in China with commercial growth opportunities.

Roy K. McCall CFA/CPA once worked as an interim manager in Magellan Aerospace (MAL.TO) a supplier to Airbus, Boeing, Pratt & Whitney Canada and others.  He has provided strategic M&A advice to two other aerospace component and service firms.


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