MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Oct. 9, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- NewSpace has been described as both a movement and a philosophy, based on the idea of commercializing space – both in Earth orbit and beyond, reports Teal Group. "For me, it's simply private entrepreneurship finally arriving en masse and starting to take hold of an industry that has been way too complacent and conservative for decades," said Marco Cáceres, Teal Group's Senior Space Analyst and its Director of Space Studies, whose NewSpace forecast coincided here with the first exhibition day of Satellite Innovation 2018 Silicon Valley.
According to analytical forecasting firm Teal Group, NASA has long tried to fuel the commercialization of space, but it has had limited success because that's not what it was designed to do. "But the space agency got it right when it decided to take a chance and invest in private space flight, by selecting SpaceX and Rocketplane-Kistler on August 18, 2006 to 'develop and demonstrate commercial orbital transportation services that could open new markets and pave the way for contracts to launch and deliver crew and cargo to the International Space Station,'" said Cáceres.
The decision to do so was made at a time when the Space Shuttle was in the process of being phased out and the US government did not have a ready replacement, reports the Teal Group. "As it turned out," said Cáceres. "the decision paid off."
Gauging the outlook for NewSpace, Teal reports that in recent years, there have emerged dozens of NewSpace satellite programs aiming to build, launch and operate thousands of new satellites by the start of the next decade. Among the most high profile, ambitious and well-funded of these include SpaceX’s Starlink, OneWeb’s OneWeb, EarthNow’s and EarthNow. These three constellations, alone, could account for nearly 15,000 satellites. In all, more than 23,000 satellites have been proposed for launch over the next decade by NewSpace ventures. This represents almost three times the number of satellites launched worldwide since Russia’s Sputnik 1 went up in 1957.
"It feels as if the industry and the market are on the verge of a major transformation and growth cycle," said Cáceres. "It feels a little like the mid-1990s, right before all those mobile LEOs starting going up. Of course, things didn't quite turn out as we expected back then, but I think this time is different."
(For additional information on this press release, please contact Senior Space Analyst and Director of Space Studies Marco Cáceres at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 703-385-1992, x 104., or Defense Business Briefing Contributing Editor Douglas Cornell, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 703-573-5374.)
(For information on Teal Group's World Space Systems Briefing, and Worldwide Mission Model Online, both edited by Marco Cáceres, contact Teal's VP-Sales & Marketing Douglas Cornell, at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or 703-573-5374, who will put you in touch with our other appropriate sales representative in the Eastern USA and Canada, Central USA, Western USA and Far East, and Europe and the Middle East.)
Teal Group is an aerospace and defense market analysis firm based in Fairfax, Virginia USA. It provides competitive intelligence to industry and government worldwide.