Astranis is set to build Omega constellation after $200M Series D

Image Credits: Astranis (opens in a new window)

Astranis has fully funded its next-generation satellite program, called Omega, after closing its $200 million Series D round, the company said Wednesday. 

“This next satellite is really the milestone into the next frontier for Astranis,” Megan Sapack, Astranis’ avionics lead, said in a video. 

Astranis develops and operates small broadband communications satellites in geostationary orbit. It has launched several of its first-generation satellites, called MicroGEOs, and sells the capacity to local telecoms in countries including the United States, the Philippines, and Mexico. It unveiled its next-generation Omega satellites in April, which the company says will provide five times the bandwidth capacity in a similarly small form factor. 

The team was able to do this by reducing the amount of power per beam and designing a new, larger reflector. The reflector is folded into a small volume during launch and unfolded on orbit to around the size of a boxing ring. The new spacecraft also includes improved mechanical, thermal and avionics system performance, as well as a longer total lifetime on orbit. 

The Omega satellite.
Image Credits: Astranis

The first Omega will launch in 2026. Each spacecraft will have a 10-year operational life.

Astranis aims to manufacture 24 satellites per year in 2025, a scale that has not been seen before for spacecraft operating in geostationary orbit. While companies like SpaceX manufacture hundreds of spacecraft per year, those satellites operate in low Earth orbit; for geostationary satellite operators, the pace of manufacturing is typically on the order of a single satellite over many years, due to the increased power and size demands. Astranis’ pace has been enabled by the company bringing around 70% of the manufacturing component in-house. 

“Since moving into this new facility, we’ve taken a huge focus on taking the arts and crafts out of satellite manufacturing and transitioning it towards design for manufacturing at a mass scale,” Astranis engineer Payton Case said.

Astranis plans to have over 100 spacecraft operating on orbit by 2030. 

The round was led by long-time Astranis investor Andreessen Horowitz’s Growth Fund, co-led by BAM Elevate, a growth-stage investor backed by investment firm Balyasny Asset Management, with participation from BlackRock, Fidelity, and Baillie Gifford. 

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