Amazon announced on Friday a plan to launch thousands of satellites from the Space Coast to compete with Elon Musk’s SpaceX Starlink service.
Amazon is setting up a $120 million facility for Project Kuiper, its future low Earth orbit broadband satellite network, at Kennedy Space Center’s former Shuttle Landing Facility in Florida. The 100,000-square-foot facility will be used to prepare satellites for launch at nearby Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, rather than manufacturing satellites on-site.
“We have an ambitious plan to begin Project Kuiper’s full-scale production launches and early customer pilots next year, and this new facility will play a critical role in helping us deliver on that timeline,” Steve Metayer, vice president of Kuiper Production Operations, said in a statement.
The agreement with Space Florida promises up to 50 jobs with an average salary of $80,000 and 300 jobs during construction. Mr. Metayer said these employees will play an important part in the company’s mission to connect tens of millions of customers worldwide.
This is the first major commercial venture into the Launch and Landing Facility, managed by Space Florida through a 30-year property agreement with NASA. Previously known as “Project Comet,” the facility’s tenant remained a mystery until now.
“This partnership not only fuels Florida’s reputation as the gateway to space but also accelerates Space Florida’s mission to transform the Launch and Landing Facility into the premier location for aerospace innovation,” said Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez, chair for Space Florida’s board of directors.
During a ceremony at Kennedy Space Center, Ms. Nuñez, along with other state elected officials and Amazon executives, signed their names on a girder that will become a part of the construction. The ceremony took place when the ground was broken for the facility in January.
Constellation of Over 3,000 LEO Satellites
Amazon’s Project Kuiper aims to deploy a constellation of 3,236 broadband satellites with up to 92 launches over five years, partnering with United Launch Alliance (ULA), Arianespace, and Amazon boss Jeff Bezos’s other space venture Blue Origin for launch services.