Swedish Space Corporation

The Swedish Space Corporation, SSC, also registered as Svenska rymdaktiebolaget, is a Swedish space services company. SSC operations consist of launches of sounding rockets and stratospheric balloons, tests of future generation rocket engines and new rocket fuels, operation and maintenance of space and aviation systems, as well as satellite communications through the use of SSC ground stations deployed around the world. SSC is also working on developing its Space Surveillance Tracking (SST) and Space Traffic Management (STM) programs with the aim to identify, assess and minimize risks of collisions and disruptions associated with space debris.

In January 2023, Spaceport Esrange, a new establishment of Esrange Space Center was inaugurated – the first facility on EU mainland  with the capability of launching satellites. The first satellite launch is expected to take place in 2024.

SSC operations in Sweden are located in Solna, Kiruna and Ågesta. The company also has operations in Australia, Chile, the Netherlands, Thailand, Germany, the United States and the United Kingdom. SSC has roughly 630 employees and an MSEK 1,263 turnover in 2022.

Development of space systems
SSC has more than fifty years of experience in helping space agencies, companies, commercial actors and research institutes gain access to space. The company designs, develops and tests various types of space systems, rocket systems, subsystems and experimental equipment for research, in space or near-space environments. Common areas of application are microgravity experiments, atmospheric research and testing and validation of space-related systems.

SSC has specialist competence in satellite communications, rocket and balloon systems, launching of rockets and balloons, and provides consulting services for satellite operators.

Satellite communications
SSC has one of the world's largest and most active civilian networks of ground stations that communicate with various types of satellites. SSC's worldwide network of ground stations uses the group's own as well as contracted satellite stations around the world. SSC has its own ground stations in Sweden, US, Canada, Chile, Thailand and Australia. The company also has partnering ground stations in Germany, Italy, Spain, South Africa, Antarctica, India and Japan.

Most scientific satellites, as well as many Earth observation satellites, orbit the Earth's poles. The strategic location of Esrange Space Center, above the Arctic Circle, allows for regular contact with satellites as they pass within range several times a day. Esrange is today one of the world's most used satellite stations.

Through the company’s subsidiaries LSE in Germany and Aurora Technology in the Netherlands, SSC offers consulting services in satellite control. A third subsidiary, GlobalTrust in Great Britain, offers analysis of satellite data.

Esrange
Esrange Space Center, the world's most versatile space center and a hub for SSC operations, is located outside Kiruna in northern Sweden, above the Arctic Circle (68°N, 21°E). In addition to the infrastructure that forms the base site, there is also access to a large, unpopulated impact and recovery area covering an area twice the size of Luxembourg (about 5,200 km2). The facility has been in operation since 1966 and was initially part of the European Space Agency (ESA) before becoming a part of SSC as the company was founded in 1972.

From Esrange, SSC launches sounding rockets and stratospheric balloons for research in various research disciplines. The base also houses a satellite communications station which forms the hub of SSC's global network of ground stations, with around 30 antennas on site.

The newest facility within the base, Spaceport Esrange, was inaugurated on 13 January 2023 by H.M. King Carl XVI Gustaf, Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. Spaceport Esrange is the first facility on EU mainland with the ability to launch satellites into orbit. The facility will also be used for Europe’s program for the development of reusable rockets, Themis, which is run by Ariane Group on behalf of the European Space Agency (ESA). The facility will also be used for test launches of the next generation of sounding rockets.

Future European rocket technology is also tested at the base's test beds. There, various space actors develop reusable, more sustainable and cost-effective rocket technology.

Space Situational Awareness
The number of satellites in near-Earth space is expected to reach nearly 10,000 within the next few years. In that same area of space, large amounts of space debris are also in orbit. It is estimated to be more than 130 million objects, some as small as a millimeter, traveling at high speed around the Earth.

The increasing number of objects in orbit around the Earth increases the risk of collisions. SSC's is therefore expanding its initiative in the area of Space Situational Awareness (SSA), which aims to detect, predict and assess the risks of spacecraft launches and re-entry.

The SSC has started a program whose task is to track and catalog the objects in orbit around the Earth - so-called Space Traffic Management (STM) - a communication system to avoid potential collisions during launch and for satellites in orbit in the future.

Customers
SSC's largest customers in space systems development and launch services are the Swedish National Space Agency (SNSA) and the European Space Agency (ESA). Satellite operation services and satellite consulting services are performed on behalf of satellite owners, satellite operators and space agencies worldwide. Tests of space and flight systems are conducted for both Swedish and foreign companies as well as the armed forces.

History
Rymdbolaget was established by the Swedish government in 1972 to be the executive body for the State Delegation for Space operations, now under the name of Swedish National Space Agency (SNSA). The company was formed in 1972 by Esrange Space Center and Rymdtekniska Gruppen in Solna, Stockholm. During the period 1966-1972, Esrange was an ESA owned facility but in 1972 the ownership passed into Swedish ownership in connection with the formation of Rymdbolaget. Today, SSC has no official duties, and the company is 100 percent owned by the Swedish state.

Since the turn of the millennium, the company has expanded and now has operations in Australia, Chile, the Netherlands, Thailand, Germany, the US and the UK. For instance, in 2000, SSC acquired Universal Space Network, USN, a company founded by space pioneer and astronaut Charles “Pete” Conrad, Jr. He was the third human to walk the Moon. The acquirement of USN, nowadays known as SSC Space US, marks the starting point in which SSC began establishing a global ground station network which today is one of the biggest civilian networks in the world. The acquisition is also reflected in today’s growth into the lunar market.

Over the years, SSC has also designed and built satellites, developed airborne ocean surveillance systems used by coastguard organizations worldwide, as well as assisted the Swedish Defence Materiel Administration, FMV, with the operation, maintenance, and development of test systems at the Vidsel test site. All of these businesses have today been divested.

Scientific satellites developed

 * Prisma satellites – launched 15 June 2010
 * SMART-1 – launched 27 September 2003
 * Odin – launched 20 February 2001
 * Astrid 2 – launched 10 December 1998
 * Astrid 1 – launched 24 January 1995
 * Freja – launched 6 October 1992
 * Viking – launched 22 February 1986

Telecom satellite project management

 * Tele-X
 * Sirius W
 * Sirius 2
 * Sirius 3

Rocket program at Esrange (selection)

 * MASER / SubOrbital Express
 * MAXUS
 * SPIDER
 * REXUS
 * TEXUS
 * MAPHEUS
 * SERA
 * STERN
 * BOLT

Balloon program at Esrange (selection)

 * SAMBO
 * PIROG
 * CHEOPS
 * STRAFAM
 * EASOE
 * THESEO
 * ARCHEOPS
 * ENVISAT
 * SUNRISE
 * POGO
 * HADT
 * HEMERA
 * BEXUS

== Places of business ==


 * Solna (headquarters and development center)
 * Esrange Space Center, Kiruna (launch and test services and satellite communications)
 * Ågesta (teleport services)
 * North Pole, Alaska, USA (satellite station)
 * Clewiston, Florida, USA (satellite station)
 * Horsham, Pennsylvania, USA (office)
 * South Point, Hawaii, USA (satellite station)
 * Inuvik, Canada (satellite station)
 * Harwell, UK (office)
 * Winchester, UK (office)
 * Darmstadt, Germany (office)
 * Gilching, Germany (office)
 * Noordwijk, Netherlands (office)
 * Santiago, Chile (satellite station)
 * Punta Arenas, Chile (satellite station)
 * Siracha, Thailand (satellite station)
 * Western Australia Space Center, Australia (satellite station)

Wholly owned subsidiaries

 * Aurora Technology, Lisse, The Netherlands (satellite operations consultants)
 * LSE Space, Munich and Darmstadt, Germany (satellite operations consultants)
 * GlobalTrust, Winchester, UK (satellite data analysis)