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Open Cosmos Launches First Two Satellites to Low Earth Orbit

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Michael Johnson
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Following a rapid regulatory win, the venture moved to place the opening pair of telecom spacecraft into its own LEO system, securing high-priority Ka-band access only a week earlier after completing spectrum filings to expand secure connectivity worldwide.

Open Cosmos Mission Success

From New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula, Rocket Lab’s Electron carried two units on a ride branded ‘The Cosmos Will See You Now,’ marking the network’s switch-on phase for a scalable constellation intended to serve customers across Europe and beyond. Designed for future versatility, the platform can host earth observation sensors as well as telecom payloads.

At precisely 10:52 GMT on 22 January—11:52 p.m. NZDT the same day—the satellites separated into a circular orbit roughly 1,050 kilometers up, transitioning the program from factory and design work to in-orbit checkout.

Development of New Constellation

Beyond pure engineering spectacle, this flight validates that the architecture, build pipeline, and operations approach are ready for routine service, paving a phased rollout of the wider system in the coming months to deliver resilient connectivity across Europe and the world.

Initial service targets range from Portugal to Liechtenstein.

Speaking after the deployment, Founder and CEO Rafel Jordà Siquier emphasized the strategic step.This marks a landmark for our team and moves us closer to delivering trusted, sovereign broadband for Europe and partners worldwide. Progressing from spectrum authorization to operational spacecraft in mere days shows the maturity of our system and how quickly we can translate strategy into action.These first craft establish the base for a robust space backbone designed to support governments, institutions, and commercial users when continuity matters most.

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