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In this issue:
- SpaceX caps the Crew Dragon fleet at four
- Funding for hyperspectral imaging startup Pixxel
- A week with Space Capital’s Chad Anderson
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SpaceX will not manufacture any more new Crew Dragon capsules
It’s the end of a (short) era. SpaceX will no longer be making new Crew Dragons, the spacecraft that ferries humans to and from space, and will instead focus on reusing the fleet of four already in existence, Reuters reported Monday.
Crew Dragon is SpaceX’s first crewed spacecraft, borrowing its design from the Dragon cargo capsule that’s used for resupply services to the ISS. Crew Dragon capsules have taken humans to space in five separate missions since its debut in 2020, including Inspiration4, a private crewed mission financed by billionaire Jared Isaacman.
While the company concludes production of Crew Dragon, it remains hard at work on development of the ultra-super-heavy next-generation launch system Starship. SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said on Twitter that the company is targeting May for the first orbital flight test of the new spaceship, but the company is still awaiting key regulatory approvals from the Federal Aviation Administration before that can take place.
Pixxel raises $25 million for hyperspectral imagery satellite constellation
Pixxel, a startup with offices in the United States and India, has raised $25 million in funding to launch a constellation of satellites that will provide hyperspectral coverage on demand. It aims to send up a six-satellite constellation that will be able to provide five-meter resolution over much of the Earth’s surface about every 48 hours.
The money will go toward constructing and launching the satellites, as well as a software platform for customers. Founder and CEO Awais Ahmed said it would be “a generalized platform with built-in models and analysis.”
The $25 million Series A was led by Radical Ventures, with participation from Jordan Noone, Seraphim Space Investment Trust Plc, Lightspeed Partners, Blume Ventures and Sparta LLC.
This week with…Chad Anderson
Chad Anderson is founder and managing partner of Space Capital, an early-stage VC firm with $100 million under management. He also serves on the board of the U.K.’s Space Catapult and volunteers as board director of the nonprofit Explorers Club. He is also a member of the User Advisory Committee for the International Space Station U.S. National Lab in Washington.
TechCrunch: What are you working on?
Chad Anderson: On the heels of successfully closing $32 million for Space Capital II last month, we are continuing to actively invest. We have more amazing companies in the pipeline than I’ve ever seen — we’ve already made eight investments out of the new fund, have another investment closing this week and have a term sheet out for our next investment. And the Space Capital I portfolio is starting to show some significant gains as our portfolio hits key milestones and our seed investments graduate to Series B. With three active funds under management, we’re now supporting companies at all stages of the venture cycle, so a lot going on, and we’re having a lot of fun.
What’s something that happened in the news in the last week that you can’t stop thinking about?
Alongside a slew of mostly underwhelming earnings calls from deSPAC’d space companies last week, the SEC proposed rules to overhaul SPACs by enhancing disclosure and investor protections. (TC note: Find more info here.) The proposal would tighten rules around forward-looking projections and often unrealistic growth forecasts that SPACs have become notorious for. And companies acquired by SPACs, as well as their officers and directors, would become liable for misrepresentations or omissions in the merger documents that SPACs file. I think this is a very healthy development and I’ve been thinking about all the ways it will improve the long-term health of the category.
What are you looking forward to this week?
While an orbital launch from South Texas likely won’t actually happen this week, something I’m watching closely is the progress at Starbase. I visited the production facility/test site/spaceport last week and the scale of what’s happening there is awe-inspiring. The Super Heavy first stage that SpaceX will likely use for its first Starship orbital test flight was just moved to the Orbital Launch Site, so I’m excited to see what happens next. Like many others, I’m looking forward to seeing them get their launch license and testing this thing on orbit.
What song has been on repeat?
“The Fresh Prince of Bel Air” theme song: “Now, this is a story all about how my life got flipped-turned upside down…”
More news from TC and beyond
- Blue Origin successfully sent a crew of six to suborbital space Thursday on the New Shepard rocket. This is the fourth crewed mission for the company.
- The Federal Aviation Administration has delayed releasing its final environmental assessment for SpaceX’s Starbase/Starship in Boca Chica by another month. The new deadline is April 29. SpaceX cannot conduct the first orbital test launch of Starship until it receives this regulatory approval.
- Impulse Space Propulsion closed a $20 million seed round led by Peter Thiel’s Founders Fund. The startup wants to develop in-space transportation services, including last-mile payload delivery and space debris deorbiting.
- NASA could receive up to $26 billion in funding for fiscal year 2023, $2 billion more than this year, if President Joe Biden’s budget proposal is approved. That includes $7.5 billion for “Deep Space Exploration Systems,” a category that includes the ambitious Artemis program to return humans to the moon.
- Neuraspace, a Portuguese startup that is part of the European Space Agency’s Business Incubator program, raised €2.5 million from Armilar Venture Partners to commercialize its space junk monitoring and collision avoidance platform.
- Rocket Lab sent two payloads to orbit on behalf of Black Sky on Saturday from its launch facility on Mahia Peninsula, New Zealand. This is Rocket Lab’s 25th Electron mission and second Electron mission of 2022.
- Space Launch System, NASA’s pricey, massive rocket system, began its wet dress rehearsal. The wet dress rehearsal is a final series of key tests to determine if SLS is ready to take to the skies for the Artemis 1 moon mission later this spring.
- SpaceX launched Transporter-4 on Friday, carrying 40 customer payloads to space as part of its popular orbital rideshare service.
- SPACs: Planet, Astra, Redwire and AST SpaceMobile all reported results this week. Find them by clicking on the links.
- Synspective, a Japanese startup, raised $100 million to build out a constellation of synthetic aperture radar satellites.
- Terran Orbital closed its SPAC merger Monday, making their debut on the New York Stock Exchange under ticker symbol $LLAP — an abbreviation of “Live Long and Prosper.”
Weekly reading
Check out this fascinating Twitter thread by Kevin Bell, a lawyer at Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. He details how a whistleblower informed him of a new spacecraft thruster system that used mercury, a powerful neurotoxin that, once emitted, would eventually fall back to the Earth’s surface. It’s an illustrative case of how legal and regulatory frameworks often don’t keep up with the speed of technological development.
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