Status Report

2004 FAA/COMSTAC NGSO Commercial Space Transportation Forecasts

By SpaceRef Editor
May 21, 2004
Filed under , ,

Download full report (PDF)

Executive Summary

The Federal Aviation Administration’s
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation (FAA/AST) and the
Commercial Space Transportation Advisory
Committee (COMSTAC) have prepared
forecasts of global demand for commercial
space launch services for the period 2004
to 2013.

The 2004 Commercial Space Transportation
Forecasts report includes:

  • The COMSTAC 2004 Commercial Geosynchronous Orbit Launch Demand Model, which projects demand for commercial satellites that operate in geosynchronous orbit (GSO) and the resulting commercial launch demand to geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO); and
  • The FAA’s 2004 Commercial Space Transportation Forecast for Non- Geosynchronous Orbits, which projects commercial launch demand for satellites to non-geosynchronous orbits (NGSO), such as low Earth orbit, medium Earth orbit, elliptical orbits, and external orbits beyond the Earth.
  • Together, the COMSTAC and FAA
    forecasts project that an average of 23.4
    commercial space launches worldwide will
    occur annually from 2004 to 2013. The
    combined forecasts are similar to last
    year’s forecast of 23.7 launches per year
    although still down from 26.8 in the 2002
    forecast and 32 in the 2001 forecast.

    In the GSO market, satellite demand is 211
    satellites, or 21.1 satellites per year, a
    decrease of nine percent compared to the
    2003 forecast when there was an average of
    23.3 satellites per year. However, the resulting
    demand for launches per year overall did
    not decrease proportionately with the number
    of satellites available because the 2004
    forecast identifies fewer dual-manifested
    launches in the future compared to last
    year’s forecast. An analysis of GSO mass
    data in the report indicates that the shift to
    heavier-class satellites may be slowing.

    The NGSO market includes 106 satellites
    in the market from 2004–2013, the first
    significant forecast increase in the total
    number of NGSO satellites since the 1998
    forecast, mostly because of improved business
    conditions for two telecommunications
    companies. Despite a 32.5 percent
    increase of the number of satellites, launch
    demand overall is unchanged from last
    year’s forecast of 51 total launches because
    an increasing
    number of NGSO satellites are multiplemanifested;
    more satellites are riding on
    one launch vehicle on an average basis.

    COMSTAC and FAA project an average
    annual demand for:

    • 18.3 launches of medium-to-heavy launch vehicles to GSO;
    • 2.3 launches of medium-to-heavy launchvehicles to NGSO; and
    • 2.8 launches of small vehicles to NGSO.

    SpaceRef staff editor.