Rocket Lab Selects NASA Stennis Space Center for Neutron Engine Test Facility
September 21 2022 - 07:30AM
Business Wire
Construction to Begin on Archimedes Test
Complex in Mississippi in a Major Fast-Tracking of the Neutron
Launch Vehicle to First Launch
Rocket Lab USA, Inc (Nasdaq: RKLB) (“Rocket Lab”, or “the
Company”), a leading launch and space systems company, today
revealed it has selected NASA’s historic Stennis Space Center in
Mississippi as the location of its engine test facility for its
reusable rocket, Neutron.
The Archimedes Test Complex will be located within the larger A
Test Complex at Stennis Space Center across a 1 million square foot
area for 10 years, with an option to extend the lease for an
additional 10 years. The Archimedes Test Complex will include
exclusive use and development of existing industrial NASA
infrastructure and the Center’s A-3 Test Stand to develop and test
Neutron’s Archimedes reusable engines. Rocket Lab has also secured
a capital investment incentive from the Mississippi Development
Authority to further develop the facilities and infrastructure at
Stennis for Neutron. By expanding Stennis Space Center to include
the Archimedes Test Complex, Rocket Lab is expected to create
dozens of new jobs and make significant capital investments in the
state of Mississippi.
Neutron is Rocket Lab’s reusable rocket in development, designed
as a cost-effective, reliable, and responsive launch service to
help build mega-constellations, deliver large spacecraft to
low-Earth orbit, geostationary orbit, and interplanetary
destinations, and to support a sustained human presence in space.
Neutron will be powered by in-house designed and manufactured
Archimedes reusable rocket engines and an advanced upper stage to
enable high performance for complex satellite deployments.
Rocket Lab Founder and CEO, Peter Beck, says: “Before rockets
flew to the Moon, they first had to go through Mississippi, and as
we build a new rocket to reshape space access once again, Stennis
is a fitting location for Neutron. Creating a test complex from
scratch to the scale and complexity needed to test and develop
Archimedes would have had an inconceivably long lead time, so the
fact that we’ve secured Stennis and can leverage its existing
infrastructure and test stand puts us on the fast-track to
Neutron’s first launch. The icing on the cake is having fantastic
partners like NASA and the state of Mississippi behind us to bring
innovative rocketry, economic development, and new jobs to the Gulf
Coast.”
Rocket Lab Vice President – Launch Systems, Shaun D’Mello, says:
“The strong support, readiness and flexibility from NASA Stennis
and Mississippi to bring engine test operations for Neutron to the
state made Stennis the ideal location over other potential sites.
Stennis Space Center’s legacy in rocket engine testing, established
infrastructure, and skilled workforce will be both a boost to
Neutron’s development and help grow Mississippi’s already robust
aerospace test capabilities, securing a future for the state in
innovative technology development.”
Rocket Lab expects to begin construction on the Archimedes Test
Complex at Stennis Space Center quickly. At the same time,
construction is continuing at pace on the Neutron Production
Complex and launch site at Wallops Island, within the NASA Wallops
Flight Facility and Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Virginia’s
Eastern Shore. Combined, the two sites represent over two million
square feet of operations for Neutron’s production, testing, and
launch facilities. Further Neutron expansion will continue
throughout the United States as the program develops toward first
launch.
ADDITIONAL COMMENTS
- The Governor of Mississippi, Tate Reeves: “When it comes
to the aerospace industry, it’s all systems go in Mississippi.
That’s because our state offers a prime location for innovative
research, well-trained workers, and innovative technology
development. Rocket Lab is a wonderful addition to the impressive
range of global leaders who call NASA’s Stennis Space Center home
and I’m excited to welcome them here.”
- U.S. Senator Roger Wicker: “American leadership in outer
space runs through Mississippi, and it is great to see more
companies partnering with Stennis Space Center as a growing hub of
our nation’s aerospace industry. I appreciate that Rocket Lab is
using Stennis’s 'A-3' test stand, which Congress saved from
demolition in 2010. Rocket Lab will bring quality jobs and
technology to Mississippi for years to come.”
- U.S. Senator Cindy Hyde-Smith: “The Stennis Space Center
has a special place in American aerospace history, and Mississippi
eagerly welcomes Rocket Lab to use this fantastic test facility to
add to this legacy. Its work will continue Stennis’ key role in
development and testing of the engines that will help usher in a
new generation of achievements in aerospace and space exploration.
I particularly appreciate that the Rocket Lab agreement involves
partnership with NASA, the State of Mississippi, and our wonderful
Gulf Coast.”
- U.S. Congressman Steven Palazzo: “I applaud Rocket Lab
on their decision to utilize the unique facilities at Stennis Space
Center to further their space missions,” said Congressman Steven
Palazzo. “South Mississippi has long been a staple in the pathway
to space for both the public and private sectors. Not only the
infrastructure, but the people too, create a receptive environment
for business partnerships. I look forward to Rocket Lab’s future at
Stennis and in space innovation and exploration.”
+ Images & Video Content www.flickr.com/photos/rocketlab
+ About Rocket Lab Founded in 2006, Rocket Lab is an end-to-end
space company with an established track record of mission success.
We deliver reliable launch services, satellite manufacture,
spacecraft components, and on-orbit management solutions that make
it faster, easier and more affordable to access space.
Headquartered in Long Beach, California, Rocket Lab designs and
manufactures the Electron small orbital launch vehicle, the Photon
satellite platform and the Company is developing the Neutron launch
vehicle for constellation deployment. Since its first orbital
launch in January 2018, Rocket Lab’s Electron launch vehicle has
become the second most frequently launched U.S. rocket annually and
has delivered 150 satellites to orbit for private and public sector
organizations, enabling operations in national security, scientific
research, space debris mitigation, Earth observation, climate
monitoring, and communications. Rocket Lab’s Photon spacecraft
platform has been selected to support NASA missions to the Moon and
Mars, as well as the first private commercial mission to Venus.
Rocket Lab has three launch pads at two launch sites, including two
launch pads at a private orbital launch site located in New Zealand
and a second launch site in Virginia, USA which is expected to
become operational in 2022. To learn more, visit
www.rocketlabusa.com.
+ About STENNIS SPACE CENTER Stennis Space Center, located near
Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, is a federal city operated by NASA
since 1961. More than 40 onsite agencies, organizations,
universities, and companies share operating costs, while pursuing
individual missions, as a model of fiscal efficiency. If their
combined workforces of more than 5,000 employees were counted as a
single entity, Stennis would rank among the Top 10 Mississippi
companies in size. The site is a major economic engine for the Gulf
Coast region, with an average direct annual impact of more than
$625 million within a 50-mile radius.
+ FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS This press release may contain
certain “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the
Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, Section 27A of
the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and Section 21E of the
Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These
forward-looking statements, including without limitation
expectations regarding the development, capability and technical
design of the Neutron rocket architecture and related components as
well as the construction, timing, capabilities and benefits of the
Neutron production and launch complex, are based on Rocket Lab’s
current expectations and beliefs concerning future developments and
their potential effects. These forward-looking statements involve a
number of risks, uncertainties (many of which are beyond Rocket
Lab’s control), or other assumptions that may cause actual results
or performance to be materially different from those expressed or
implied by these forward-looking statements. Many factors could
cause actual future events to differ materially from the
forward-looking statements in this press release, including risks
related to the global COVID-19 pandemic, including risks related to
government restrictions and lock-downs in New Zealand and other
countries in which we operate that could delay or suspend our
operations; delays and disruptions in expansion efforts; our
dependence on a limited number of customers; the harsh and
unpredictable environment of space in which our products operate
which could adversely affect our launch vehicle and spacecraft;
increased congestion from the proliferation of low Earth orbit
constellations which could materially increase the risk of
potential collision with space debris or another spacecraft and
limit or impair our launch flexibility and/or access to our own
orbital slots; increased competition in our industry due in part to
rapid technological development and decreasing costs; technological
change in our industry which we may not be able to keep up with or
which may render our services uncompetitive; average selling price
trends; failure of our launch vehicles, satellites and components
to operate as intended either due to our error in design, in
production or through no fault of our own; launch schedule
disruptions; supply chain disruptions, product delays or failures;
design and engineering flaws; launch failures; natural disasters
and epidemics or pandemics; changes in governmental regulations
including with respect to trade and export restrictions, or in the
status of our regulatory approvals or applications; or other events
that force us to cancel or reschedule launches, including customer
contractual rescheduling and termination rights; risks that
acquisitions may not be completed on the anticipated timeframe or
at all or do not achieve the anticipated benefits and results; and
the other risks detailed from time to time in Rocket Lab’s filings
with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the heading “Risk
Factors” and elsewhere (including that the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic may also exacerbate the risks discussed therein). There
can be no assurance that the future developments affecting Rocket
Lab will be those that we have anticipated. Except as required by
law, Rocket Lab is not undertaking any obligation to update or
revise any forward-looking statements whether as a result of new
information, future events or otherwise.
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+ Rocket Lab Media Contact Murielle Baker
media@rocketlabusa.com
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