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Supplier
Arianespace S.A.
Boulevard de l’Europe
BP 177
91006 Evry-Courcouronnes CEDEX
France
Arianespace is one of the world’s leading satellite launch company, operating a full family of launchers: Ariane 5 for heavy lift spacecraft, the Soyuz for medium size and Vega for light weight spacecraft.
The French multinational company was the world’s first commercial launch serviceprovider and operates five locations worldwide for the production, operation and marketing of the Ariane program. Arianespace operates its launch services from South America (at the Spaceport in French Guiana) and Central Asia (at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazachstan).
The company was founded in 1980 and has its headquarters in Courcouronnes, France, near Paris. Arianespace, a subsidiary of The Arianegroup, launched more than 550 satellites since 1980. Total revenues in 2018 exceeded 1.4 billion euros.
On 21 October 2011 Arianespace launched the first Soyuz rocket ever from outside former Soviet territory. The payload was two Galileo navigation satellites.
Arianespace primary shareholders are its suppliers, in the various nations of the EU. Arianespace currently has 20 shareholders with France as the largest stakeholder (64%) in the Ariane development program. Other countries that support the program are Germany (20%), Belgium (3,5%), Denmark, Spain (2%), Italy (3%), The Netherlands (2%), Norway (0,1%), Sweden and Switzerland (2,7%).
Arianespace launched satellites for all major satellite operators, such as Intelsat, Eutelsat, Telesat, SKY Perfect JSAT from Japan, ISRO from India, Hellas-Sat (ArabSat) and many others.
Company History
To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the first Ariane launch, we look back at that day in December 1979 when Europe’s independent adventure into space began. When ESA came into being in 1975, one of its first objectives was to build a European launcher. The reason was simple: no launcher, no independent access to space and no space program.
Although the Member States of ESA had different interests and priorities, some were interested in carrying out research in space while others were more concerned in developing satellites, on one point they were unanimous: Europe needed to have independent access to space and its own space program. This meant that it had to develop launchers and have its own Spaceport.
In 1964, the French government had chosen Kourou in French Guiana as a base from which to launch its satellites. When ESA was created, the French government offered to share its Centre Spatial Guyanais (CSG) with the new space agency. For its part, ESA approved funding to upgrade the launch facilities at the CSG to prepare the Spaceport for the Ariane launchers under development.
The first flight of an Ariane rocket was scheduled for December 15th 1979. On that day, in front of a large and expectant audience at Kourou, the countdown reached zero and the rocket motor underneath the launcher roared into life and then went out.
Fortunately, the fault was not serious and the launch was rescheduled for December 23rd, but then bad weather and a few small problems led to yet another delay. The next attempt proved to be third time lucky. On December 24th, at 14:14 PM local time, Ariane 1 blasted into space from Europe’s Spaceport and Europe’s independent adventure in space had begun.
During 2002, the ESA announced the Arianespace Soyuz programme in cooperation with Russia; a launch site for Soyuz was constructed as the Guiana Space Centre, while the Soyuz launch vehicle was modified for use at the site. On February 4th 2005, both funding and final approval for the initiative were granted. Arianespace had offered launch services on the modified Soyuz ST-B to its clients.
On 21 October 2011 Arianespace launched the first Soyuz rocket ever from outside former Soviet territory. The payload was two Galileo navigation satellites.
In 2004, Arianespace held more than 50% of the world market for boosting satellites to geostationary transfer orbit (GTO).
US based SpaceX owned by Elon Musk, was new in the market and forced Arianespace to cut workforce and focus on cost cutting to decrease costs to remain competitive against the new low-cost entrant in the launch sector. SpaceX’ competition forced the whole European industry to restructure, consolidate, rationalize and streamline it operations.
In the midst of pricing pressure from SpaceX, Arianespace made a November 2013 announcement of pricing flexibility for the ‘lighter satellites’ it carries to Geostationary orbits aboard its Ariane 5. Reducing pricing allowed Arianespace to sign 4 additional contracts in September 2014 for a lower slot on an Ariane 5 launcher for the satellites that otherwise could be flown on SpaceX launch vehicle.
In September 2014 Arianespace had a backlog of launches worth 4.5 billion euro with 38 satellites to be launched on Ariane 5, 7 on Soyuz and 9 on Vega, claiming 60% of global satellite launch market. By November 2014, SpaceX had gained significant market share from Arianespace, reducing its costs through economies of scale.
In July 2017 Airbus Safran Launchers changed the name into ArianeGroup, controlling seven subsidiaries:
In 2020 Arianespace suspended operations for nearly two months due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
On February 28th, 2022 the company suspended all Soyuz launches operated by Arianespace and the Starsem Russian affiliate, following sanctions from the EU, USA and the UK issued because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The Soyuz is a Russian-made rocket and the Arianespace/Starsem operation is governed by an international agreement between France, Russia and the ESA.
Launch Vehicles
Ariane Launchers
Arianespace has operated various versions of the Ariane since the first launch in 1979:
The new Ariane 6 vehicle, developed by ArianeGroup and its European industrial partners, would have a similar payload capacity to the Ariane 5 but has considerably lower costs. Ariane 6 will be available in two versions depending on the required performance: A62 with two strap-on boosters, and A64 with four.
Ariane 6 first test flight is planned for 2024.
Soyuz Launcher
Arianespace operates the Soyuz medium launcher at the Guiana Space Centre (Soyuz CSG or Arianespace Soyuz) to accompany the light Vega and heavy-lift Ariane 5. The updated Soyuz 2 vehicle is supplied by Roscosmos with TsSKB-Progress and NPO Lavochkin, while additional components are supplied by Airbus Defense & Space, Thales Alenia Space and RUAG from Switzerland.
The Soyuz launcher can orbit spacecraft with a maximum payload mass of 4,4 tonnes to LEO and 3,25 tonnes to GTO. Soyuz is a four-stage launcher, designed to high reliability levels with more than 1,900 manned and unmanned missions performed to date.
Vega Launcher
The Vega launcher, manufactured and delivered to Arianespace by Avio, is a four-stage orbital rocket that was first developed in 1998 and had its maiden flight in February 13th 2012 carrying scientific satellite for international customers.
The Vega will launch small satellites ranging in size from 1 kgs to 500 kgs for the Small Spacecraft Mission Service (SSMS) program that was created by ESA in cooperation with the EU. The program was started to help bolster Arianespace’s response to the rideshare demands of the ever-growing small satellite launch market.
The Vega project was conceived in Italy in 1988, when a US-built Scout launcher carrying Italian satellites from a floating platform off the coast of Kenya was retired. To replace it, the Italian firm BPD Difesa Spazio proposed to the newly formed Italian Space Agency (ASI), a domestically built rocket. The new vehicle would be based on the Zefiro motor developed by the company for the European Ariane program.
The Vega launcher can orbit spacecraft with a maximum payload mass of 1,45 tonnes to LEO.
Launch Facilities
Arianaspace is operating Spaceport Europe in Kourou in French Guyana, an overseas French territory for the launches on Ariane 5, Soyuz and Vega vehicles.
In 1964 the French Government chose Kourou, from 14 other sites, as a base from which to launch its satellites. When the European Space Agency (ESA) came into being in 1975, the French Government offered to share its Centre Spatial Guyanais (CSG) with ESA. For its part, ESA approved funding to upgrade the launch facilities at the CSG to prepare the Spaceport for the Ariane launchers under development.
The Arianespace Soyuz project was announced by the ESA in 2002. Cooperation with Russia began in two areas: construction of a launch site for Soyuz in CSG and development of the Soyuz launch vehicle modified for the Guiana Space Centre. In 2007 the construction of the Soyuz Launch Complex started to be completed in 2011, allowing Arianespace to offer launch services on the modified Soyuz ST-B to its clients. Since 2011, Arianespace has ordered a total of 23 Soyuz rockets, enough to cover its needs until 2019 at a pace of three to four launches per year.
Since then, ESA has continued to fund 2/3 of the spaceport’s annual budget to finance the operations and the investments needed to maintain the top-level services provided by the Spaceport. ESA also finances new facilities, such as launch complexes and industrial production facilities, for new launchers such as Vega or for the exploitation of Soyuz.
Kourou was an ideal launch site since it lies at latitude 5°3′, just over 500 km north of the equator. Its nearness to the equator made it ideally placed for launches into geostationary transfer orbit as few changes had to be made to a satellite’s trajectory. Also, French Guiana is scarcely populated and equatorial forests cover 90% of the country. In addition, there is no risk of cyclones or earthquakes.
Launchers also profit from the ‘slingshot’ effect, that is the energy created by the speed of the Earth’s rotation around the axis of the Poles. This increases the speed of a launcher by 460m per second. These important factors save fuel and money, and prolong the active life of satellites.
Thanks to its geographical position, the launch site offers a launch angle of 102°, enabling a wide range of missions from east to north.
Arianespace is constructing the launch site for the new Ariane 6 rocket. The launch complex covers 170 hectares, with buildings on 18 hectares. The site is located 17 km away from the town of Kourou and 4 km west from the Ariane 5 launch pad.
Resources
www.arianespace.com
www.ariane.group
www.safran-group.com
www.airbusafran-launchers.com
www.esa.int
www.directory.eportal.org
www.space.com edition February 27th 2019
www.eurockot.com
www.wikipedia.org
www.pyroalliance.fr
www.russianspaceweb.com
www.youtube.com
www.bloomberg.com
www.sodern.com
www.owler.com
www.spacenews.com edition May 17th 2017
www.spacenews.com edition January 15th 2019
www.nasaspaceflight.com edition September 1st 2020
www.cilas.com
www.satellitetoday.com edition March, 3rd, 2022
Supplier
Arianespace S.A.
Boulevard de l’Europe
BP 177
91006 Evry-Courcouronnes CEDEX
France
Satellites launched by Arianespace
Spacecraft | Country | |||
ABS-2 (ST-3, KoreaSat-8)GEO | 75° East | Asia Broadcast Satellite (ABS) | Communication | |
ABS-7 (KoreaSat-3)GEO | ABS-7 (KoreaSat-3) at 116° East | Asia Broadcast Satellite (ABS) | Communication | |
AfriStar (Spectrum-2)GEO | 21° East | Worldspace, Corp. | Broadcasting | |
Al Yah 1 (Yahsat 1A, Y1A)GEO | 52.5° E | SES | Communication | |
Al Yah 3GEO | 20° West | Space42 (aka Yahsat) | Communication | |
Amazonas-2GEO | 61° West | Hispasat | Communication | |
AMC-18 (GE-18)GEO | 139° West | SES | Broadcasting | |
AMC-2 (GE-2)GEO | 81° West | SES | Communication | |
AMC-21GEO | 125° West | SES | Broadcasting | |
AMC-4 (GE-4)GEO | 67° West | SES | Communication | |
AMC-5 (GE-5, Nahuel-1B)GEO | 81° West (De-orbited) | SES | Broadcasting | |
AMC-7 (GE-7)GEO | 137° West | SES | Communication | |
AMC-8 (GE-8)GEO | 135° West | SES | Communication | |
AMOS 2GEO | 85.2° West | Spacecom | Communication | |
Anik F1GEO | 107° West | Telesat | Communication | |
Anik F2 (CANSAT KA4, Wildblue-2)GEO | 111° West | Telesat | Communication | |
ArabSat-5AGEO | 30.5° East | Arabsat | Communication | |
ArabSat-5CGEO | 20° East | Arabsat | Communication | |
ARSat-1GEO | 72° West | ARSAT | Communication | |
ARSat-2GEO | 81° West | ARSAT | Communication | |
AsiaStar (Spectrum-1)GEO | 105° East | - | Broadcasting | |
Astra 1LGEO | 19.2° East | SES | Broadcasting | |
Astra 1NGEO | 19.2° East | SES | Broadcasting | |
Astra 2DGEO | 28° East | SES | Broadcasting | |
Astra 2F/Eutelsat 28FGEO | 28° East | Eutelsat | Broadcasting | |
Astra 3AGEO | 23.5° East | SES | Broadcasting | |
Astra 3BGEO | 23.5° East | SES | Broadcasting | |
Astra 5B (HYLAS 2B)GEO | 32° East | Avanti | Broadcasting | |
Athena-FidusGEO | 38° East | Telespazio, Italy | Military & Intelligence | |
Azerspace-1/Africasat-1aGEO | 46° East | Azercosmos | Communication | |
Azerspace-2/Intelsat-38 (IS-38)GEO | 45° East | Azercosmos | Communication | |
BADR-6 (ArabSat-4C, ArabSat-4AR)GEO | 26° East | Arabsat | Communication | |
Bicentenario (MEXSAT-3)GEO | 114.9° West | Ministry of Communications and Transportation | Communication | |
BrasilSat-B4 (Star One B4)GEO | 92° West | Star One | Communication | |
BRIsatGEO | 150.5° East | PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia (Persero), Tbk. | Communication | |
BSat-2aGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Broadcasting | |
BSat-2cGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Communication | |
BSat-3aGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Broadcasting | |
BSat-3bGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Broadcasting | |
BSat-4aGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Broadcasting | |
BSat-4bGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Broadcasting | |
COMSATBw-1GEO | 66° West | MilSat Services, GmbH. | Military & Intelligence | |
COMSATBw-2GEO | 34° West | MilSat Services, GmbH. | Military & Intelligence | |
DirecTV-14 (AT&T T-14)GEO | 99° West | AT&T | Broadcasting | |
DirecTV-15 (AT&T T-15)GEO | 103° W | AT&T | Broadcasting | |
DirecTV-16 (AT&T T-16)GEO | 101° West | AT&T | Broadcasting | |
DirecTV-4S (AT&T T-4S)GEO | 101.2° West | AT&T | Broadcasting | |
EchoStar XVII (EchoStar-17, Jupiter-1)GEO | 107° West | EchoStar | Communication | |
EchoStar XVIII (EchoStar-18, USABSS-41)GEO | 61° West | EchoStar | Communication | |
Eurasiasat-1 (Türksat-2A)GEO | 42° East | Türksat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 113 West A (SatMex 6)GEO | 113° West | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 115 West A (SatMex 5)GEO | 115° West | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 12 West B (Atlantic Bird 2, Eutelsat 8 West A)GEO | 12,5° West | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 133 West A (E33C, Eurobird 1, E28A)GEO | 133° West | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 13C (HOTBIRD 9, HOTBIRD 13C)GEO | 13° East | Eutelsat | Broadcasting | |
Eutelsat 13E (HOTBIRD 7A, Eurobird 9A, HOTBIRD 13E)GEO | 13° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 172BGEO | 172° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 21B (Eutelsat W6A)GEO | 21,5° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 3 West BGEO | 16° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 33E (HOTBIRD 10, Atlantic Bird 4A, Eutelsat 3C, HOTBIRD 13D)GEO | 33° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 48D (Eutelsat 28B, W2M, AfghanSat-1)GEO | 48° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 5 West A (Atlantic Bird 3, Stellat-5)GEO | 5° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 59A (E36WA, E12WA, Atlantic Bird 1)GEO | 59° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 65 West AGEO | 65° West | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 7CGEO | 7° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat 8 West B (NileSat-104B)GEO | 8° West | Eutelsat | Communication | |
EUTELSAT KonnectGEO | 7° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
EUTELSAT Konnect VHTSGEO | 3° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat QUANTUMGEO | 48° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Eutelsat W1 (Eutelsat 4A, Eurobird 4A)GEO | 4° East | Eutelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-11 (G-11)GEO | 93° West (Inclined Orbit) | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-12 (Galaxy XII, G-12)GEO | 129° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-14 (G-14, Galaxy-5R)GEO | 125° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-15 (G-15)GEO | 133° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-17 (G-17)GEO | 85° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-30 (G-30)GEO | 125° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-35 (G-35)GEO | 95° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-36 (G-36)GEO | 89° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Galaxy-4R (G-4R)GEO | 77° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Geo-KOMPSAT-1 (COMS-1, Cheollian-1)GEO | 128.2° East | Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) | Earth Observation | |
Geo-KOMPSAT-2A (GK-2A, Cheollian-2A)GEO | 128° East | Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) | Communication | |
Geo-KOMPSAT-2B (GK-2B, Cheollian-2B)GEO | 128° East | Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) | Communication | |
GSAT-10GEO | 83° East | NewSpace India | Communication | |
GSAT-11GEO | 74° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
GSAT-15GEO | 93° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
GSAT-17GEO | 93° East | NewSpace India | Communication | |
GSAT-18GEO | 74° East | NewSpace India | Communication | |
GSAT-24GEO | 83° East | NewSpace India | Communication | |
GSAT-30GEO | 83° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
GSAT-31GEO | 43° East | NewSpace India | Communication | |
GSAT-8 (INSAT-4G)GEO | 55° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
Heinrich-Hertz (H2Sat)SmallGEO | 13° East | DLR | Technology | |
Hellas-Sat 4/SaudiGeoSat-1GEO | 39° East | Hellas-Sat | Communication | |
Hellas-Sat 5GEO | 39° East | Hellas-Sat | Communication | |
Hispasat 30W-5 (Hispasat-1E)GEO | 30° West | Hispasat | Communication | |
Hispasat 36W-1 (Hispasat-AG1)GEO | 36° West | Hispasat | Communication | |
Hispasat 74W-1 (Amazonas-4a)GEO | 74° West | Hispasat | Communication | |
Horizons-2GEO | 85° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Horizons-3eGEO | 169° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
HYLAS 1GEO | 33° West | Avanti | Communication | |
HYLAS 2GEO | 31° East | Avanti | Communication | |
HYLAS 3 (EDRS C)GEO | 31° East | Avanti | Communication | |
HYLAS 4 (HYLAS Africa)GEO | 34° West | Avanti | Communication | |
Inmarsat-3 F4 (I-3 F4)GEO | 54° East | Inmarsat | Communication | |
Inmarsat-3 F5 (I-3 F5)GEO | 54° East | Inmarsat | Communication | |
Inmarsat-5 F5 (Inmarsat GX5, I-5 F5)GEO | 11° East | Inmarsat | Communication | |
INSAT-2DGEO | 93.5° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
INSAT-3AGEO | 93.5° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
INSAT-3CGEO | 93.5° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
INSAT-4BGEO | 85° East | Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) | Communication | |
Intelsat-11 (IS-11, PAS-11)GEO | 43° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-12 (IS-12, PAS-12, Europe*Star 1)GEO | 64° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-17 (IS-17)GEO | 66° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-1R (IS-1R, PAS-1R)GEO | 157° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-20 (IS-20)GEO | 69° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-25 (IS-25, ProtoStar-1, ChinaSat-8, ZX-8)GEO | 98.5° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-28 (IS-28, Intelsat New Dawn)GEO | 23° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-29e (IS-29e)GEO | 50° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-30 (IS-30, DLA-1)GEO | 95° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-32e (IS-32e) / SKY Brasil-1 (SKYB-1)GEO | 43° West | Intelsat | Broadcasting | |
Intelsat-34 (IS-34, Hispasat 55W-2)GEO | 56° East | Hispasat | Communication | |
Intelsat-36 (IS-36)GEO | 68.5° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-37e (IS-37e)GEO | 342° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-39 (IS-39)GEO | 62° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-901 (IS-901) (ext. lifespan with MEV-1)GEO | 332.5° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-902 (IS-902)GEO | 310° East (Inclined Orbit) | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-904 (IS-904)GEO | 29° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-905 (IS-905)GEO | 336° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-906 (IS-906)GEO | 64° East | Intelsat | Communication | |
Intelsat-907 (IS-907)GEO | 27.5° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
iPStar (Thaicom-4, MEASAT-5, Synertone-1)GEO | 119.5° East | MEASAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-110 (N-SAT 110, Superbird-5)GEO | 110° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-110A (JCSAT-15)GEO | 110° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-110R/BSat-3cGEO | 110° East | B-SAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-17GEO | 136° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-3a (JCSAT-10)GEO | 128° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-4b (JCSAT-13)GEO | 124° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-8 (JCSAT-2A)GEO | 84° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
JCSAT-RA (JCSAT-12)GEO | 169° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
KoreaSat-6 (Olleh 1)GEO | 116° East | KT Sat | Communication | |
KoreaSat-7 (Mugunghwa-7)GEO | 116° East | KT Sat | Communication | |
MEASAT-3b (Jabiru-2)GEO | 91,5° East | MEASAT | Communication | |
MEASAT-3dGEO | 91.5° East | MEASAT | Communication | |
MSG-1 (Meteosat-8)SmallGEO | 0.0° West | EUMETSAT | Weather Forecasting | |
MSG-2 (Meteosat-9)SmallGEO | 0.0° West | EUMETSAT | Weather Forecasting | |
MSG-3 (Meteosat-10)SmallGEO | 0.0° East | EUMETSAT | Weather Forecasting | |
MSG-4 (Meteosat-11)SmallGEO | 0.0° East | EUMETSAT | Weather Forecasting | |
MTG-I1 (Meteosat-12)SmallGEO | 0.0° West | EUMETSAT | Weather Forecasting | |
N-Star c at 136° EastGEO | 136° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
Nahuel-1AGEO | 71.8° West | ARSAT | Communication | |
Nilesat-102GEO | 7° West | Nilesat | Communication | |
NileSat-201GEO | 7° West | Nilesat | Communication | |
NSS-12GEO | 57° East | SES | Communication | |
NSS-5 (NSS-803, Intelsat 803)GEO | 50° East | SES | Communication | |
NSS-6GEO | 169° West | SES | Communication | |
NSS-7GEO | 20° West | SES | Communication | |
NSS-9GEO | 177° East | SES | Communication | |
Optus 10GEO | 164° East | Optus Australia | Communication | |
Optus 11GEO | 160° East | Optus Australia | Communication | |
Optus C1 (Defence C1)GEO | 156° East | Optus Australia | Communication | |
Optus D1GEO | 160° East | Optus Australia | Communication | |
Optus D2GEO | 152° East | Optus Australia | Communication | |
Optus D3GEO | 156° East | Optus Australia | Communication | |
Palapa-C2GEO | 146° East | Indosat Ooredoo | Communication | |
RasComStar-QAF 1R (RQ1R) at 3° EastGEO | 3° East | RasComStar | Communication | |
SES-14GEO | 47.5° West | SES | Communication | |
SES-15GEO | 129° West | SES | Communication | |
SES-17GEO | 67° West | SES | Communication | |
SES-2 (AMC-5R)GEO | 87° West | SES | Communication | |
SGDC-1GEO | 75° West | Visiona Technologia Espacial S.A. | Military & Intelligence | |
SICRAL-1GEO | 16.2° East | Ministry of Defense Italy | Military & Intelligence | |
SICRAL-2 (Syracuse-3C)GEO | 37° East | Ministry of Defense Italy | Military & Intelligence | |
Sky Mexico-1 (SKYM-1, RB-2, DIRECTV KU-79W)GEO | 79° West | AT&T | ||
Sky Muster I (NBN-Co 1A)GEO | 140° East | NBN Co. Ltd. (NBN) | Communication | |
Sky Muster II (NBN-Co 1B)GEO | 145° East | NBN Co. Ltd. (NBN) | Communication | |
Skynet-4FGEO | 33.9° West | Ministry of Defense UK | Military & Intelligence | |
SKYNET-5AGEO | 34° West | Ministry of Defense UK | Military & Intelligence | |
SKYNET-5BGEO | 25° East | Ministry of Defense UK | Military & Intelligence | |
SKYNET-5CGEO | 17.8° West | Ministry of Defense UK | Military & Intelligence | |
SKYNET-5DGEO | 34° West | Ministry of Defense UK | Communication | |
Spaceway 2GEO | 139° West | EchoStar | Communication | |
Spaceway-3GEO | 95° West | EchoStar | Communication | |
SpainSat-1 (XTAR-LANT)GEO | 30° West | Hisdesat Servicios Estratégicos S.A. | Military & Intelligence | |
ST-1GEO | 88° East | SingTel | Communication | |
ST-2GEO | 88° East | SingTel | Communication | |
Star One C1GEO | 65º West | Star One | Communication | |
Star One C2GEO | 70° West | Star One | Communication | |
Star One C3GEO | 75° West | Star One | Communication | |
Star One C4 (HispaSat 70W-1)GEO | 70° West | Hispasat | Communication | |
Star One D1GEO | 84° West | Star One | Communication | |
Star One D2GEO | 70° West | Star One | Communication | |
STENTORGEO | 0° West | France Telecom | Communication | |
Superbird-4 (Superbird-B2)GEO | 162° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
Superbird-B3 (Superbird-8/DSN-1)GEO | 162° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
Superbird-C2 (Superbird-7)GEO | 144° East | SKY Perfect JSAT | Communication | |
Syracuse-3AGEO | 47° East | Ministry of Defense France (DGA) | Military & Intelligence | |
Syracuse-3BGEO | 5° West | Ministry of Defense France (DGA) | Military & Intelligence | |
Syracuse-4ASmallGEO | 45.5° East | French Military of Defense | Military & Intelligence | |
Syracuse-4BSmallGEO | 122° West | Ministry of Defense France (DGA) | Military & Intelligence | |
Telkom-2GEO | 118° East | Telkomsat | Communication | |
Telkom-3SGEO | 118° East | Telkomsat | Communication | |
Telstar 11 (Orion-1)GEO | 15° West | Lockheed Martin | Communication | |
Telstar-12 (Orion-2)GEO | 109° West | Telesat | Communication | |
Terrestar-1 (EchoStar-T1, CANSAT-24)GEO | 111.1° West | - | Communication | |
THOR 6 (Intelsat-1W)GEO | 1° West | Intelsat | Communication | |
THOR 7GEO | 1° West | Space Norway (former Telenor Satellite Services) | Communication | |
TiBA-1GEO | 35.5° East | Government of Egypt | Communication | |
TürkSat-3aGEO | 42° East | Türksat | Communication | |
Viasat-2 (VS-2)GEO | 70° West | Viasat, Inc. | Communication | |
Vinasat-1GEO | 132° East | VNPT (Vinasat) | Communication | |
Vinasat-2GEO | 132° East | VNPT (Vinasat) | Communication | |
Wildblue-1 (KaStar-1, iSky-1, WB-1)GEO | 111° West | Viasat, Inc. | Communication | |
XTAR-EURGEO | 29° East | HisdeSat | Military & Intelligence |
Supplier
Arianespace S.A.
Boulevard de l’Europe
BP 177
91006 Evry-Courcouronnes CEDEX
France
Rideshare missions by Arianespace
Rideshare Mission | Launch date | Launch vehicle | Spacecraft launched | Orbit |
VA264 / MetOp-SGA1 – Sentinel-5A | 13 August 2025 | Ariane 6-2 | 2 | LEO |
VV27 / CO3D – MicroCarb | 26 July 2025 | Vega-C | 5 | SSO |
VA262 / FM1 | 9 July 2024 | Ariane 6-2 | 17 | LEO |
Vega VV23 | 8 October 2023 | Vega | 11 | SSO |
VA261 / Heinrich Hertz – Syracuse-4B | 5 July 2023 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VV22 / Pléiades | 22 December 2022 | Vega-C | 2 | SSO |
VA259 / Galaxy-35/36 – Meteosat-12 | 13 December 2022 | Ariane 5ECA | 3 | GEO |
Vega-C VV21 | 13 July 2022 | Vega-C | 7 | SSO |
VA257 / GSAT-24 – MEASAT-3d | 22 June 2022 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VS27 / OneWeb Launch #13 | 10 February 2022 | Soyuz ST-B | 34 | LEO |
ST37 / OneWeb Launch #12 | 27 December 2021 | Soyuz-2.1a | 36 | LEO |
VS26 / Galileo FM23 & FM24 | 5 December 2021 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VV20 / CERES | 16 November 2021 | Vega | 3 | SSO |
VA255 / SES-17 – Syracuse-4A | 23 October 2021 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
ST36 / OneWeb Launch #11 | 14 October 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
ST35 / OneWeb Launch #10 | 14 September 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 34 | LEO |
ST34 / OneWeb Launch #9 | 21 August 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 34 | LEO |
Vega VV19 | 16 August 2021 | Vega | 5 | SSO |
VA254 / Eutelsat QUANTUM – Star One D2 | 30 July 2021 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
ST33 / OneWeb Launch #8 | 1 July 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
ST32 / OneWeb Launch #7 | 28 May 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
Vega VV18 | 28 April 2021 | Vega | 6 | SSO |
ST31 / OneWeb Launch #6 | 25 April 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
ST30 / OneWeb Launch #5 | 25 March 2021 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
ST29 / OneWeb Launch #4 | 18 December 2020 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
Vega VV17 | 17 November 2020 | Vega | 2 | SSO |
Vega VV16 | 3 September 2020 | Vega | 64 | SSO |
VA252 / JCSAT-17 – GEO-KOMPSAT-2B | 20 August 2020 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VA251 / GSAT-30 – EUTELSAT KONNECT | 15 August 2020 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VA253 / Galaxy-30 – BSat-4b | 15 August 2020 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
ST28 / OneWeb Launch #3 | 21 March 2020 | Soyuz-2.1b | 36 | LEO |
ST27 / OneWeb Launch #2 | 6 February 2020 | Soyuz-2.1b | 34 | LEO |
Soyuz VS23 | 8 December 2019 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | 6 | LEO |
VA250 / GX5 – TiBA-1 | 26 November 2019 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VA249 / IS39 – HYLAS-3 | 6 August 2019 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VA248 / DIRECTV-16 – Eutelsat-7C | 20 June 2019 | Ariane 5ECA | 2 | GEO |
VS22 / O3b FM17 – FM20 | 9 April 2019 | Soyuz ST-B | 4 | MEO |
VS21 / OneWeb-F6 | 27 February 2019 | Soyuz ST-B | 10 | LEO |
VA244 / Galileo FM19 – FM22 | 25 July 2018 | Ariane 5ES | 4 | MEO |
VS18 / O3b FM13 – FM16 | 9 March 2018 | Soyuz ST-B | 4 | MEO |
VA240 / Galileo FM15 – FM18 | 12 December 2017 | Ariane 5ES | 4 | MEO |
Vega VV10 | 2 August 2017 | Vega | 2 | SSO |
VA233 / Galileo FM07 & FM12 – FM14 | 17 November 2016 | Ariane 5ES | 4 | MEO |
Vega VV07 | 16 September 2016 | Vega | 5 | SSO |
VS15 / Galileo FM10 & FM11 | 24 May 2016 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VS14 / Sentinel-1B | 25 April 2016 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | 5 | SSO |
VS13 / Galileo FM08 & FM09 | 17 December 2015 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VS12 / Galileo FM05 & FM06 | 11 September 2015 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VS11 / Galileo FM03 & FM04 | 27 May 2015 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VS10 / O3b FM09 – FM12 | 18 December 2014 | Soyuz ST-B | 4 | MEO |
VS09 / Galileo FM01 & FM02 | 22 August 2014 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VS08 / O3b FM05 – FM18 | 10 July 2014 | Soyuz ST-B | 4 | MEO |
VS05 / O3b FM01 – FM04 | 25 June 2013 | Soyuz ST-B | 4 | MEO |
VV02 / Proba V | 7 May 2013 | Vega | 3 | SSO |
VS03 / IOV-2 | 12 October 2012 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
VV01 / LARES | 13 February 2012 | Vega | 9 | LEO |
VS01 / IOV-1 | 21 October 2011 | Soyuz ST-B | 2 | MEO |
V165 / Essaim – Hélios-2A – PARASOL | 18 December 2004 | Ariane 5G | 6 | SSO |
Supplier
Arianespace S.A.
Boulevard de l’Europe
BP 177
91006 Evry-Courcouronnes CEDEX
France
Dedicated missions by Arianespace
Dedicated Mission | Launch date | Launch vehicle | Orbit |
VV26 / Biomass | 29 May 2025 | Vega-C | SSO |
VA263 / CSO-3 | 6 March 2025 | Ariane 6-2 | SSO |
VV25 / Sentinel-1C | 5 December 2024 | Vega-C | SSO |
VV24 / Sentinel-2C | 4 September 2024 | Vega | SSO |
VA260 / JUICE | 14 April 2023 | Ariane 5ECA | GEO |
VA258 / EUTELSAT VHTS | 7 September 2022 | Ariane 5ECA | GEO |
VS25 / CSO-2 | 29 December 2020 | Soyuz ST-A | SSO |
VS24 / FalconEye2 | 1 December 2020 | Soyuz ST-A | Polar |
VV15 / FalconEye1 | 10 June 2019 | Vega | SSO |
VV14 / Prisma | 22 March 2019 | Vega | SSO |
VS20 / CSO-1 | 19 December 2018 | Soyuz ST-A | SSO |
VV13 / Mohammed VI-B | 21 November 2018 | Vega | SSO |
VS19 / MetOp-C | 7 November 2018 | Soyuz ST-B | Polar |
VA245 / BepiColombo | 20 October 2018 | Ariane 5ECA | LEO |
VV12 / Aeolus | 22 August 2018 | Vega | SSO |
VV11 / Mohammed VI-A | 8 November 2017 | Vega | SSO |
VS17 / SES-15 | 18 May 2017 | Soyuz ST-B | GEO |
VV09 / Sentinel-2B | 7 March 2017 | Vega | SSO |
VS16 / Hispasat 36W-1 | 27 January 2017 | Soyuz ST-B | GEO |
VV08 / Göktürk-1 | 5 December 2016 | Vega | SSO |
VV05 / Sentinel-2A | 23 June 2015 | Vega | SSO |
VV04 / IXV | 11 February 2015 | Vega | SSO |
VV03 / DZZ-HR | 30 April 2014 | Vega | SSO |
VS07 / Sentinel-1A | 3 April 2014 | Soyuz ST-A | SSO |
VS06 / Gaia | 19 December 2013 | Soyuz ST-B | LEO |
ST25 / MetOp-B | 17 September 2012 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | Polar |
ST21 GIOVE-B | 26 April 2008 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | MEO |
ST20 / RadarSat-2 | 14 December 2007 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | SSO |
ST16 / MetOp-A | 19 October 2006 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | Polar |
ST15 GIOVE-A | 28 December 2005 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | MEO |
ST13 / Galaxy-14 | 13 August 2005 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | GEO |
ST12 / Amos-2 | 27 December 2003 | Soyuz ST/Fregat | GEO |