French small launch developer Latitude has closed $30 million in new capital because it eyes the primary flight of its Zephyr rocket in 2025.
Whereas different rocket corporations are going greater, creating much more large rockets, Latitude is taking a distinct method: mild, small, and hopefully low cost sufficient to beat out opponents. Its first rocket, Zephyr, will stand at simply 62 toes and can be able to delivering as much as 100 kilograms of payload to low Earth orbit. (For reference, SpaceX’s Falcon 9 has a payload capability of twenty-two,800 kilograms to LEO.) The 2-stage rocket can be powered by eight 3D-printed engines referred to as Navier, which Latitude is creating in-house.
In a press release, Latitude CEO and cofounder Stanislas Maximin stated 2024 could be a “pivotal year” earlier than Zephyr’s first flight in 2025.
Certainly, the corporate goals to make use of the financing to proceed creating the following iteration of Zephyr – a barely bigger launcher that can be able to carrying 200 kilograms of payload by 2028. As well as, Latitude stated in a press launch that the funding will allow the institution of a brand new meeting line, manufacturing the primary launcher, further testing and including extra headcount to the 100-plus particular person workforce.
Latitude’s present traders Crédit Mutuel Innovation, Growth, Bpifrance by way of DeepTech 2030, and UI Investissement, in addition to Blast.membership, Kima Ventures and unnamed particular person traders, contributed to the spherical. The corporate has now raised practically $55 million to-date.
Latitude is a part of a rising variety of European launch startups seeking to enhance that continent’s native launch functionality, which has been sorely missing with ongoing delays to next-gen rockets like Arianespace’s Ariane 6. Charles Beigbeder, a European VC with Growth, referred to as this out straight in a press release, saying that “Europe needs to regain full sovereignty over space launchers.”
The French authorities has additionally made its personal efforts to help a local house trade – which Latitude is already benefitting from. The nation’s DeepTech 2030 fund goals to take a position over 50 billion euros to kickstart France’s deep tech ecosystem.