» » Spain’s Indra teams up with balloon operator and launch startup Zero2Infinity

Spain’s Indra teams up with balloon operator and launch startup Zero2Infinity

Spain’s Indra teams up with balloon operator and launch startup Zero2Infinity

WASHINGTON — Spanish IT company Indra will assist Barcelona-based Zero 2 Infinity in developing and promoting balloon-enabled systems for reaching the stratosphere and low Earth orbit.
The two Spanish companies announced today a collaborative agreement where Indra will leverage its international presence and experience developing satellite technology for Earth observation, telecommunications and ground control centers to further Zero 2 Infinity’s customer reach and technology development.
Zero 2 Infinity, which has been operating high-altitude balloons since 2009, is developing Bloostar, a balloon-assisted launch system designed to lift 75 kilograms to low Earth orbit.
José Mariano López Urdiales, Zero 2 Infinity CEO and founder, told SpaceNews Jan. 31 that the main benefits of the partnership are boosting Zero 2 Infinity’s market access and incorporating Indra’s technology expertise.
“We are going to be working with them on devising specific applications of high-altitude balloons using some of the technology that Indra has so that these high-altitude balloons can be used for more purposes,” he said.
Indra is not investing any capital into Zero 2 Infinity under the just-announced partnership.
An Indra spokesperson told SpaceNews by email that Indra has no plans for monetary investments in the short term, “but we don’t dismiss to do it depending on [how]  the collaboration evolves.”
Another Spanish launch startup, PLD Space, raised $7.1 million last year led by corporate partner GMV of Madrid, Spain.
López Urdiales said Zero 2 Infinity’s “Elevate” high-altitude balloon business has several missions planned for the first quarter of this year, putting Bloostar development on the backburner while revenue-generating services take priority. He said Zero 2 Infinity would like to conduct “more complex test flights sometime later in the year,” but declined to give specific details. Last year, Zero 2 Infinity launched a Bloostar prototype, using just one of the three-stage launcher’s engines.
Indra and Zero 2 Infinity said they “will jointly examine potential missions” and aim to reach startups, research groups and small businesses seeking stratospheric or space access.




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