All verified mentions of this organization in source documents.
Indra's board approved Miguel Ángel Panduro's entry into the group's management committee while he was serving as chief executive officer of Hispasat.
Indra designated Miguel Ángel Panduro as director general of Indra Space at the end of December following the formal closing of its acquisition of 89.68% of Hispasat's share capital.
In his role as director general of Indra Space, Miguel Ángel Panduro will report to Indra's chairman Ángel Escribano and to CEO José Vicente de los Mozos.
Miguel Ángel Panduro, director general of Indra Space, emphasized the need to align industrial, defense, and space policies to secure critical European capabilities.
Spanish companies participating at the 18th European Space Conference include GMV, Indra, Hispasat, Integrasys, Satlantis, Pangea, Sateliot, and Open Cosmos.
GMV Innovating Solutions, based in Spain, developed an advanced payload processing unit that will fly as one of the five experiments on the Indra CubeSats.
The Spanish company Indra is building two CubeSats for a separate Flight Ticket mission.
The two Indra-built CubeSats will carry five experiments selected by the European Commission.
Other experiments on the Indra CubeSats originate from Belgium and the Netherlands.
Deimos is now owned by Indra.
Indra Company and Hisdesat are preparing a request for quotation (RFQ) to replace the SpainSat NG 2 satellite after a failure in December.
Indra stated that the cause of the failure was an impact from a millimeter-sized object on a vital area of the satellite.
Indra Group and Hisdesat are preparing an industry bid process for a replacement satellite.
The incident occurred at a distance of 50,000 kilometers from Earth, prompting Indra Group, the owner of Hisdesat, to implement a contingency plan to prevent any effects on the Ministry of Defense and its clients.
Indra Group, as the majority partner of Hisdesat, reports that the SpainSat NG II satellite has suffered the impact of a space particle during its journey to its final orbital position.
The incident with the SpainSat-NG II satellite occurred at a distance of 50,000 kilometers from Earth, prompting Indra Group to immediately implement a contingency plan to ensure that the Ministry of Defense and its other clients were not affected.
Indra noted that Spainsat NG-II will be replaced as soon as possible if necessary.
Indra Group is the majority partner of Spanish operator Hisdesat.
Hispasat, the operator of Spainsat NG-II and a subsidiary of Indra, has activated emergency contingency protocols.
Indra Group disclosed that the SpainSat NG II satellite was impacted by space debris during its orbit-raising process.