SmartSat CRC is formally launching the Aurora Space Startup Cluster.
The Cluster is a new company with over sixty-five member companies representing every part of the space supply chain – from rocket launch services, in-space computing, precision sensors, satellite digital twin technology, in-orbit and deep space operations, right through to ground station antennae development and Earth data applications for agriculture, resources and sustainability management.
Aurora aims to provide a framework for startups to grow together in commercial collaborations with one another, with research organisations, and with local and international primes, to win business, commercialise leap-frog R&D, and build world-class capabilities in ways that would otherwise be difficult by themselves.
Aurora’s Inaugural Board is comprised of Directors Andrew Barton (Southern Launch), Troy McCann (Moonshot), Chair Dr Tim Parsons (Delta-V Newspace Alliance), Conrad Pires (Picosat Systems), and Dr Anastasia Volkova (FluroSat), together with Prof Andy Koronios and Peter Nikoloff representing SmartSat CRC.
A brand identity for Aurora has also been established, reflecting the organisation’s goal to help its members grow.
“Startups are, by definition, companies looking to grow fast by leveraging new technologies and disruptive business models. If we’re to have any chance of meeting the nation’s ambitious growth targets for space, we need to help our space startups grow faster, in technical readiness level, in capability to execute, and commercial acumen,” Dr Parsons, who chaired the Aurora Steering Group in the past year through its formation phase, said.