Skynet 6A successfully passes Preliminary Design Review
Stevenage,
14 January 2021 – Airbus has successfully completed the first key phase
of the Skynet 6A project with the achievement of the Preliminary Design Review
(PDR). The project now has permission to move into the next phase leading to
the Critical Design Review (CDR).
Airbus was awarded the Skynet 6A contract in July 2020 and teams across its
sites in Stevenage, Portsmouth and Hawthorn have been working on the programme
to achieve this key milestone. Meetings with the UK Ministry of Defence (MOD)
were held virtually enabling the review board to take place in October and the
PDR being achieved in November.
Richard Franklin, Managing Director of Airbus Defence and Space UK said: “This
is excellent news and demonstrates our joint commitment to work in partnership
to achieve the programme schedule. The progress we are making in building the
UK MOD’s next generation military satellite and getting to this stage, despite
current restrictions, really highlights the flexible and strong working
relationship we have built with the Defence Digital team. Skynet 6A, to be
built entirely in the UK, will significantly enhance the UK’s milsatcoms
capability, building on the heritage of the four Skynet 5 satellites which were
also built by Airbus, and which are all still operating perfectly in orbit.”
Teams from across the space and ground segments in Airbus worked closely with
their MOD counterparts to keep the programme on track.
Skynet 6A will extend and enhance the Skynet fleet.
The contract signed with the UK MOD in July 2020 involves the development,
manufacture, cyber protection, assembly, integration, test and launch, of a
military communications satellite, Skynet 6A, planned for launch in 2025. The contract also covers technology development programmes,
new secure telemetry, tracking and command systems, launch, in-orbit testing
and ground segment updates to the current Skynet 5 system. The value of the contract is more than £500 million.
The Skynet 5 programme, provided by Airbus as a full service outsource
contract, has provided the UK MOD with a suite of highly robust, reliable and
secure military communications services, supporting global operations since
2003. Airbus has been involved in all Skynet phases since 1974 and this phase
builds on a strong UK commitment to space manufacturing in the UK. The
programme commenced by using the legacy Skynet 4 satellites and then augmenting
them with a fully refurbished ground network before launching the Skynet 5A, 5B,
5C and 5D satellites between 2007 and 2012.
The Skynet 5 programme has reduced or removed many of the technical and service
risks for the MOD, whilst ensuring unrivalled secure satcoms and innovation to
UK forces. Through the many years of delivering an exceptionally reliable
Skynet service the Airbus teams have managed to significantly extend the
lifespan of the Skynet satellites many years beyond their design life, offering
significant additional value for money and capability to the UK.
The Skynet 6A satellite is based on Airbus’ Eurostar
Neo telecommunications satellite platform. It will utilise more of the radio
frequency spectrum available for satellite communications and the latest
digital processing to provide both more capacity and greater versatility than
Skynet 5 satellites. The satellite will feature electric orbit raising
propulsion as well as electric station keeping systems for maximum cost
effectiveness. Complete satellite integration will take place at Airbus
facilities in the UK followed by testing using RAL Space testing facilities at
Harwell in Oxfordshire supporting the UK Space Agency initiative for sovereign
UK end-to-end satellite production and support.
Image courtesy Airbus