Haakon, Crown Prince of Norway, inaugurated the spaceport at a ceremony Nov. 2. The spaceport is located at Nordmela on the Norwegian island of Andøya inside the Arctic Circle and is in the final stages towards operating capability, according to a Nov. 2 press statement.

Andoya Space says the spaceport will become the first operational orbital spaceport in Europe.

The development comes as Europe faces a bottleneck in launch capabilities, with delays to the Ariane 6 and grounding of the Vega C, and a need for strategic autonomy.

The fully constructed spaceport is planned to host several launch pads. German rocket developer Isar Aerospace has exclusive access to the first launch site, which has been built to Isar’s specifications. This infrastructure includes a launch pad, payload integration facilities and a mission control center.

The launch site will support Isar’s two-stage Spectrum launch vehicle, designed to deliver up to 700 kilograms to sun-synchronous orbit (SSO) and up to 1,000 kilograms to low Earth orbit.

I hadn’t heard of Isar or Spectrum before. It will be interesting to see if they can carve out a section of the European launch market.

  • @Jumuta
    link
    English
    28 months ago

    seems like a high inclination electron competitor? would be interesting to see

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      18 months ago

      700kg to SSO / 1000kg to LEO is more like 3.5x Electron. I think the closest direct comparisons would be Firefly Alpha and ABL RS1.