SSC announces four new polar antennas to strengthen its unmatched polar connectivity
Swedish Space Corporation (SSC) strengthens its leading polar capability with four new antennas at its polar ground stations; two in Canada and two in Sweden. First out is a new 7,3m tri-band antenna at the Inuvik Satellite Station Facility (ISSF) in Canada. Together these four antennas will extend the SSC’s capacity and capability by adding further connectivity for polar orbiting satellites. The announcement marks yet another step in SSC’s major extension towards a fully global Ka-band connectivity by the end of 2021.
“This investment is an important part of our global ground station network expansion, aiming at meeting the urgent and growing demand for high downlink capacity for high resolution earth observation data. We see a bright future at the ISSF and already have several customers waiting to begin their operations from the new establishment. The market demand is our main driver and we are gearing up accordingly”, says Patrik Melvås, Head of Business Development at SaMS, SSC.
The new 7,3 meter antenna, owned and operated by SSC, features tri-band capability accommodating S-, X- and Ka-band frequencies. Together with the two existing SSC antennas at the ISSF site, the new establishment will add to the company’s unmatched polar connectivity for satellite operations. As part of the overall polar sites extension, three additional antennas will also be introduced later this year; one at the Inuvik Satellite Station in Canada and two at Esrange Space Center in Sweden.
“The Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation is pleased to support SSC’s expansion at ISSF. SSC’s upgraded capabilities will meet a growing market demand for increased connectivity to polar orbiting satellites, confirming that Inuvik truly is a global destination for polar spacecraft operations. In addition, over the years, our partnership has contributed significantly to economic development in Canada’s western Arctic. SSC’s commitment to the ISSF has created new possibilities, new jobs, and new business opportunities in the region”, says Éric Loubier, Director General, Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation.
The polar expansion is central in meeting the growing demand from satellite owners who choose to operate their polar orbiting satellites through the dual use of northernly located ground stations. The new establishment is also an important part of SSC’s comprehensive frequency upgrade. By the end of 2021 the company will have installed Ka-band capability across its global network, making SSC the first company to offer a truly global commercial and multi-mission Ka-band capacity network; presently across strategic locations in Chile, Thailand, Canada and Sweden.
“Polar connectivity is particularly challenging due to the busy satellite traffic, which is why many of our customers choose to support their satellites through the dual use of our ground stations in Sweden and Canada; what we call the ‘Kinuvik’ concept. This complementary coverage ensures increased resilience and longer satellite passes. The appetite for Kinuvik is very high and we will continue to invest to meet this growing market demand. Furthermore, the addition of Ka-band frequency to our global network will allow our customers to operate much higher data volumes”, says Dan White, EVP Americas Region at SSC.
Read more about the Kinuvik concept or SSC’s Canadian heritage.
For further information please contact:
Philip Ohlsson, Press Contact, Swedish Space Corporation, SSC.
Phone: +46 (0)70-721 70 26, mail: philip.ohlsson@sscspace.com
Corinna Vester, Manager, Stakeholder Relations and Business Development, NRCan.
Phone: +1 613-854-9137, mail: corinna.vester@canada.ca
About SSC’s Satellite Management Services: SSC is a global leader in ground station services supporting spacecraft operators in any orbit, from LEO to Lunar and beyond. The SSC global ground network’s particularity lies in its ability to serve multi-mission customers across the complete life span of their spacecraft with the highest level of quality. It can support multiple satellites simultaneously, using several antennas with suitable frequency bands, across a dozen of ground station sites strategically located around the world. SSC was a pioneer in introducing the ground station-as-a-service approach in the 70’s. In 1999, SSC was once again the first company to offer that concept on a global scale when partnering with USN and creating the first commercial global ground segment – the Prioranet network. Ever since, the SSC global ground station network has continued to expand itself to deliver most comprehensive ground segment services to the market. SSC is also the only commercial company who has been successfully supporting lunar communications for more than a decade. https://www.sscspace.com/services/satellite-ground-network-services/
About SSC: Swedish Space Corporation, SSC, helps space organizations, companies, other commercial actors and research institutes to get access to space. SSC's products and services enable successful space projects within telecommunications, security, meteorology, navigation and positioning, scientific research, earth observation and other applications. Through our approximately 550 committed employees, we offer specialist expertise in satellite communications, rocket and balloon systems, launch services and flight test services. Through our local presence on all continents, we help our customers with specific solutions in space systems, subsystems, instruments, technology and other related services. www.sscspace.com
About CCMEO: The Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation (CCMEO) of Natural Resources Canada operates a remote sensing program coordinated under the Earth Sciences Sector. CCMEO works in co-operation with other agencies of the Government of Canada, provincial governments, industry, and Canadian universities. It is responsible for the acquisition and archiving of Earth observation data and for the development of remote sensing applications, related methodologies and systems. CCMEO is located in Ottawa and operates satellite data receiving stations in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Gatineau, Quebec and Inuvik, Northwest Territories. www.landsat.usgs.gov/GNC