
Norway's Arctic spaceport hosts Europe's first orbital vehicle launch
Scheduled to take place sometime between 12.30pm and 3.30pm CET the launch from the Arctic space centre will be the first flight of an orbital launch vehicle from the European continent, excluding Russia.
Measuring 28 metres (92 feet) high and two metres in diameter, with a payload capacity of one tonne, the Spectrum will not carry any cargo on this launch and is not expected to reach orbit.
"Every second we fly is good, because we collect data and experience. Thirty seconds would already be a great success," explained Daniel Metzler, co-founder and chief executive of Isar Aerospace that built the rocket.
"We do not expect to reach orbit with this test. In fact, no company has yet managed to put its first orbital launch vehicle into orbit," he said.
US billionaire Elon Musk's "SpaceX needed four attempts. We want to be faster," he added in an email to AFP.
Last year's Draghi report, which laid out recommendations on how Europe can boost its economic growth, recognised space as a key sector.
Europe has had no access to Russian space stations and launchers since Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Its space industry has also seen delays in the development of the Ariane 6 rocket and the suspension of the European Vega-C satellite launcher after an accident.
It wasn't until March 6th, when the first commercial flight of an Ariane 6 rocket took off from Kourou in French Guyana, that Europe was able to regain its own space independence after several months without its own access to space.
Advertisement
Space race
Less expensive small launchers like the Spectrum, usually developed by private actors, are a welcome complement to put miniature satellites -- often used for Earth observation or internet coverage -- into orbit.
"The rise of these new actors and new European launch services is part of a common objective: to guarantee independent and sovereign access to space. Their role is expected to strengthen in the coming years," Toni Tolker-Nielsen, director of Space Transportation at the European Space Agency (ESA), told AFP.
The European market is fighting to catch up with US groups such as Musk's SpaceX and Blue Origin, owned by Jeff Bezos.
In addition to Isar Aerospace, Europe is home to Germany's HyImpulse and Rocket Factory Augsburg (RFA), French groups Latitude and MaiaSpace and Spain's PLD Space, all racing to establish themselves as key players in the sector.
At the same time, a number of spaceport projects are taking shape across Europe, from the Portuguese Azores to the British Shetland Islands, Norway's Andøya and Esrange in neighbouring Sweden, many of them hoping to become the first to launch.
Advertisement
In Britain, billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit shut down operations after a failed attempt to launch the first rocket into orbit on a Boeing 747 that took off from a spaceport in Cornwall.
Isar Aerospace's launch on Monday will be the first vertical launch of an orbital vehicle on the European continent, where launches have until now involved suborbital rockets.
"Whatever the outcome, the launch of Spectrum will mark an important milestone, as it is the first launch of a European launcher under entirely private responsibility. We fully support this momentum," Tolker-Nielsen said.
Founded in 2018, the Munich start-up boasts that it developed its two-stage launcher almost entirely in-house.
The company has already signed a contract with the Norwegian space agency to put two maritime surveillance satellites into orbit by 2028.
The Andøya Spaceport, which presents itself as "the first operational spaceport in continental Europe", meanwhile says its location in the Arctic is ideal for launching polar and so-called sun-synchronous orbit (SSO) satellites.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Local Norway
15-05-2025
- Local Norway
Norway's Vipps app set to enable money transfers across Europe
Vipps users in Norway could be able to send funds to the three southern European countries and Poland by next summer, Vipps MobilePay said in a press release on Thursday. The company has joined up with several other European money-sharing platforms as part of a project to connect users across borders. That should mean that a Vipps user in Norway may be able to send money to a user of the Spanish payment app Bizum in the same way they currently send funds to other Vipps users. Other platforms based in Italy, Spain, Portugal and Poland joining the project mean that its eventual reach could be 100 million users of the various apps across Europe. Additional countries could also join the network in future, according to Vipps MobilePay. "We are now starting to make the solutions work together, which is called interoperability. Even though the wallets look the same on the outside, they are built very differently. We are starting with 'person to person', and then moving on to 'person to business', Rune Garborg, CEO at Vipps MobilePay, said in a press release. Vipps users in Norway can already send funds to MobilePay or Vipps users in Sweden, Denmark, and Finland, with the platforms in each of the Nordic countries already linked . Sweden, like Norway, uses Vipps, while Finland and Denmark use MobilePay. The two apps have around 12 million users across the four countries. Advertisement Cross-border payments within the Nordic region currently incur a fee of four percent, charged by Vipps MobilePay. This is on top of currency conversion surcharges. Vipps MobilePay hasn't yet confirmed whether fees will apply to new countries, or what those fees might be when introduced. In order to use Vipps in Norway, users need to have an account with a Norwegian bank and at least one personal debit or credit card issued by a Norwegian bank. Users also need a Norwegian social security number in order to verify their identity with the BankID electronic ID, and a Norwegian phone number. READ ALSO: Which Norwegian banks issue BankID to foreigners with a D-number?


Local Norway
05-05-2025
- Local Norway
'Choose Europe': New €500m push launched to lure disgruntled US scientists
French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen were set on Monday to host a conference in Paris aimed at attracting US researchers ready to relocate because of President Donald Trump's policies. European commissioners, scientists, academics and ministers for research from European Union member countries will discuss, among other things, financial incentives to lure disgruntled US scientists across the Atlantic. Paris's Sorbonne University hosted the conference, called "Choose Europe for Science", which was to close with speeches by Macron and von der Leyen. The European Union will launch a new incentives package worth €500 million to make the bloc "a magnet for researchers" from elsewhere, Commission chief von der Leyen said. Speaking at a Paris conference she said of the $567-million initiative that "we have to offer the right incentives". Macron took the opportunity to criticise Donald Trump's policies towards science. "Nobody could have imagined that this great global democracy whose economic model depends so heavily on free science... was going to commit such an error," he said. "We refuse a diktat consisting of any government being able to say you cannot research this or that." Von der Leyen also said questioning the role of science was "a gigantic miscalculation". "Science holds the key to our future here in Europe," she said. READ ALSO: How Sweden can woo US scientists Universities and research facilities in the United States have come under increasing political and financial pressure under Trump, including threats of massive federal funding cuts. US research programmes face closure, tens of thousands of federal workers have been fired and foreign students fear possible deportation for their political views. The 27-nation EU hopes to offer an alternative for researchers and, by the same token, "defend our strategic interests and promote a universalist vision", an official in Macron's office told AFP. Advertisement The French president has already appealed to foreign, notably US, researchers to "choose France". Last month he unveiled plans for a funding programme to help universities and other research bodies cover the cost of bringing foreign scientists to the country. READ ALSO: Spain lures US scientists fleeing Trump with €200K in extra funding 'Flood of applicants' Aix Marseille University in the south of France announced in March it would open its doors to US scientists threatened by cuts. It says its "Safe Place for Science" scheme has already received a flood of applicants. Last week, France's flagship scientific research centre, the CNRS, launched a new initiative aimed at attracting foreign researchers whose work is threatened. It is also seeking to attract French researchers working abroad, some of whom "don't want to live and raise their children in Trump's United States", according to CNRS President Antoine Petit. Advertisement READ ALSO: Germany urged to poach US researchers unhappy with Trump An official in Macron's office said Monday's conference came "at a time when academic freedoms are retreating and under threat in a number of cases and Europe is a continent of attractiveness". One obstacle, experts say is the fact that while EU countries can offer competitive research infrastructure and a high quality of life, research funding and researchers' remuneration both lag far behind US levels. But CNRS's Petit said last week he hoped that the pay gap would seem less significant once the lower cost of education and health, and more generous social benefits were taken into account. Macron's office said France and the EU were targeting researchers in a number of specific sectors, including health, climate, biodiversity, artificial intelligence and space. The French government could finance up to 50 percent of selected research projects, an official in the presidential office said, while assistance could also be offered in the form of tax incentives. Non-EU members Norway, Britain and Switzerland are participating in Monday's conference, Macron's office said.


Local Norway
03-05-2025
- Local Norway
Nordics hope to attract US researchers alienated by Trump
"To researchers in the United States: welcome," Sweden's Education Minister Johan Pehrson told AFP, reaching out to academics affected by a wave of measures under US President Donald Trump. "We can offer trust and long-term investments. We've got academic freedom. If you are looking for a place to do your work and contribute to solving global challenges, we value your knowledge," the minister said in a written statement. "Our aim is to make it easier for talented individuals to come to Sweden," he added. In late April, the American Association of Colleges and Universities published a statement condemning an "unprecedented government overreach and political interference now endangering American higher education", which as of April 28 had gathered more than 500 signatures from leaders in the sector. "It's a huge attack and most probably this will just increase," Lars Strannegard, president of the Stockholm School of Economics, told AFP. "It's a battle actually, and probably the sort of real battle regarding how the US will develop as a country. A battlefield that will be at the universities," he added. US research cuts Experts have voiced concerns that Trump's cuts to American research threaten the United States' standing as a global science leader, and that a loss of research and data could lead to a lack of fact-based information and growing disinformation. An analysis of application data by science journal Nature in April found that the number of US scientists applying for jobs abroad between January and March had increased by 32 percent, compared to the same period a year earlier. Countries across Europe are now vying to recruit academics seeking to leave the United States. Advertisement French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are due to take part in a conference in Paris next week aimed at getting foreign researchers, especially Americans, to "Choose Europe", the French presidency announced Wednesday. Nordic countries have already begun taking such steps. The Research Council of Norway announced last week a 100-million-kroner (about $10-million) scheme to attract top international researchers. "Academic freedom is under pressure in the United States, and it is an unpredictable situation for many researchers in what has been the world's leading research nation for many decades," Norway's higher education minister Sigrun Aasland said in a statement. Similarly, the Swedish Research Council in mid-April announced a grant to help universities recruit international researchers, paying out two million kronor ($207,000) to cover recruitment costs and salaries. The Danish Chamber of Commerce, along with a labour union, the Danish Society of Engineers, last week called on Danish politicians to raise awareness about Denmark among US researchers. Younger talent "We must do everything we can to ensure that Denmark, Danish science institutions and Danish companies are an attractive alternative," Brian Mikkelsen, CEO of the Danish Chamber of Commerce, said in a statement. Karin Forsberg Nilsson, dean of the faculty of medicine at Uppsala University in Sweden, said that given the collaborative nature of science, cuts to funding in the United States will have knock-on effects in Europe. "If our partners at laboratories and hospitals in the United States cannot conduct their research in the usual way because their funding is stopped or their employees are laid off, this will of course also affect the research we conduct here," Forsberg Nilsson told AFP. "It also has a major impact on large shared databases and datasets," she added. Advertisement Always on the lookout for talented researchers, she said her department has already begun being "proactive in advertising job vacancies" to US researchers. Forsberg Nilsson said they believe it could be easier to attract younger researchers who are less settled and might find Sweden's extensive childcare support and parental leave appealing for those planning to start families. Anders Hagfeldt, vice-chancellor of Uppsala University, said he also thought that finding creative ways to attract researchers would be key. "We don't have the same salaries as the best researchers in the United States, so we find it difficult to compete there," Hagfeldt told AFP. "But researchers usually try to think about doing exciting research in an exciting environment. I think we can offer that," he said.