All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
NASA, using the Air Force’s Hosted Payload Solutions contract vehicle, tasked Maxar with installing the Ball Aerospace-built TEMPO payload on a geostationary satellite.
Intelsat selected Maxar on 2020-02-03 to build Intelsat-40e.
Maxar will build Intelsat-40e using its 1300-class platform.
Maxar is evaluating having independent verification for SPIDER and other work worth around $2,000,000 performed at West Virginia University’s Robotic Technology Center.
Maxar is building SPIDER at its Pasadena, California facility.
Maxar will leverage past experience building robotic arms for NASA Mars programs in building SPIDER.
Maxar Technologies received a $142,000,000 NASA contract on 2020-01-31 to demonstrate in-space assembly using a robotic arm.
Eutelsat-7C was built by Maxar and launched in June on an Ariane 5 rocket.
DigitalGlobe, now part of Maxar Technologies, rolled out the cloud-based GBDX platform in 2015 to pair satellite imagery with analytics.
Israel Aerospace Industries nearly shut down its geostationary communications satellite manufacturing line in 2018 after losing a competition to SSL (now Maxar Technologies) to build the Amos-8 satellite.
IAI lost a 2018 competition to SSL (now Maxar Technologies) to build the Amos-8 satellite.
Maxar reported total debt of $3,100,000,000 as of September.
Maxar estimated MDA-supplied components were valued at $78,000,000 in 2019.
Maxar intends to use MDA as a component supplier for the Telesat LEO constellation bid.
MDA acquired SSL in 2012 and merged with DigitalGlobe in 2017, after which the combined company was renamed Maxar and headquartered in the United States while MDA remained a Canadian subsidiary.
Maxar’s CFO projected that the net effect of the MDA sale and the real estate transaction would reduce prior guidance for Adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow generation in the 2022 to 2023 period by approximately $50,000,000.
Thales Alenia Space and Airbus Defence and Space are competing with Maxar to build the Telesat LEO constellation.
Maxar Technologies agreed to sell its Canadian subsidiary MDA to a consortium led by Northern Private Capital for 1 billion Canadian dollars.
Maxar sold $291,000,000 of Silicon Valley real estate that previously belonged to satellite manufacturer SSL to help reduce debt.
The combined effect of the MDA sale and the recently completed Palo Alto real estate sale reduces Maxar’s overall debt by more than $1,000,000,000.