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Arianespace launched the Soyuz vehicle on 2020-12-29 to deliver the French CSO-2 Earth observation satellite into Sun-synchronous orbit.
Arianespace and Starsem have an amended launch contract with OneWeb to perform 15 more Soyuz launches through 2021 and 2022.
OneWeb concluded a revised contract with Arianespace in September that covers 16 Soyuz launches at a pace of roughly once a month to deploy a 648-satellite constellation.
The European Space Agency completed a joint investigation with Arianespace on 2020-12-18 into the 2020-11-16 failure of Vega mission VV17.
Arianespace and its Starsem affiliate launched an additional 34 OneWeb satellites on Soyuz Flight ST28 on 2020-03-20.
With the launch of 36 OneWeb satellites on Flight ST29, Arianespace had orbited a total of 239 spacecraft from Airbus Defence and Space.
Arianespace’s backlog of payloads remaining to be launched for Airbus Defence and Space, excluding remaining OneWeb satellites, counts 22 additional payloads.
Arianespace and its Starsem affiliate launched 34 OneWeb satellites from Baikonur Cosmodrome on Soyuz Flight ST27 on 2020-02-07.
Before the VV17 failure the next Vega launch, VV18, was scheduled for February 2021 and Arianespace expects that launch to take place by the end of March 2021.
A task force led by ESA and Arianespace began implementing the roadmap proposed by the IEC in response to the Vega VV17 mission loss.
Arianespace and ESA set up an Independent Enquiry Commission (IEC) following the launch failure.
Arianespace announced the loss of the Vega VV17 mission on November 17.
The second satellite from that initial second-generation batch is scheduled to launch from the Guiana Space Center in late 2021 on an Arianespace-operated Vega C.
Italy launched the first of the initial second-generation Cosmo-SkyMed satellites in December 2019 from the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana aboard a Soyuz rocket booked through Arianespace.
Synspective originally contracted Arianespace to launch StriX-α on a Vega rocket but signed a contract with Rocket Lab in April after Vega launch schedule delays caused by a July 2019 Vega launch failure.
Space Rider’s planned 2023 launch is to be aboard a next-generation Vega C rocket built by Avio and operated by Arianespace, and that launch is not covered under the 2020-12-09 contract.
Soyuz is operated side-by-side at the Spaceport with Arianespace's Ariane 5 and Vega launch vehicles.
Airbus signed a contract with Arianespace on 2020-12-07 to launch a four-satellite optical Earth observation constellation aboard a Vega C rocket in 2023.
Arianespace and Airbus have signed the launch contract for the CO3D constellation developed with the French CNES space agency.
Vega is the new-generation, highly versatile member of Arianespace’s launcher family alongside the heavy-lift Ariane 5 and medium-lift Soyuz, deployed from the Guiana Space Center.