MDA Space CEO Mike Greenley expressed strong opinions on the space economy and Earth observation during a Monday afternoon keynote at the Silicon Valley Space Week conference. He said that the space sector is likely to see โexplosiveโ growth, which western analysts may well be underestimating, thanks to a shift from government to commercial clients.ย
He sounded a cautionary note, however, on Earth observation (EO) companies, which are still heavily reliant on national security government clients and havenโt found a solid commercial customer base. While the companies are competing, collaborating and innovating, this commercial gap is a โnut thatโs still to be crackedโ โ a serious issue thatโs keeping them from enjoying the โexplosiveโ growth seen elsewhere in the space sector.ย
MDAโs changes and growth
As Greenley noted, MDA is uniquely positioned to speak on changes in the space market, having had a number of tumultuous changes of its own. Starting as Macdonald, Dettwiler and Associates, the company was a key player in the Canadian space industry for decades before being acquired by US-based Orbital Sciences in 1995 โ the same year it launched the RADARSAT-1 satellite, a synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellite that was also Canadaโs first commercial EO satellite. The company was re-acquired by Canadian investors in 2001, after Orbital Sciences spun it off, and eventually rebranded as Maxar Technologies in 2017, moving to the US in 2018 as it focused increasingly on the US government services market.ย
In 2020, three short years later, MDAโs assets were purchased from Maxar by investment firm Northern Private Capital, and the company returned to Canada; in 2024 it rebranded itself as the space-focused MDA Space, the company that Greenley heads now and called โa pure-play space company these daysโ
These are tumultuous changes, particularly since 2017, but Greenley said that they were also accompanied by comparatively rapid growth. The now-focused โpure playโ MDA Space, Greenley said, is โdoing $1 billion in revenue on space and can continue to grow it at a decent clip.โ In fact the company has enjoyed about 25 to 30% a year of top-line revenue growth over the past few years, he said, and is anticipating to do the same over the next three to five. That success has led to a rising stock price for the publicly-traded MDA Space; Greenley said that the companyโs stock price has risen from $6 CAD a share to around $22 CAD.
The global space market size question
Greenley said that this growth has gone hand-in-hand with โa growing space market and growing space sector.โ While itโs common to presume that the sector is going to continue to see explosive growth, Greenley actually raised the question of whether the size of that upcoming market might be underestimated. While itโs common to talk about the global space economy, he said, as a โ$600 billion a year market that’s on its way to $1.8 trillion a year by 2035โ according to various American studies, he noted that China seems to believe that it will be far more lucrative than that.ย
Greenley said that โwhen you read the literature on the Earth-to-moon economic zone out of Chinaโฆ[they describe it โa ten trillion a year market in 2050โ. While thatโs a somewhat different time horizon, Greenley still said that it was interesting that โthey are viewing the space opportunity as five to 10 times larger than the best economic estimates in this western side of the world.โ He believes that suggests โthere’s potentially even more for us to see in this, based on what others are seeing as they explore the space economy.โ
Transition from government to commercial businessย
The key driver of that growth, Greenley believes, is the โtransition from government to commercial based space businesses.โ In the past, companies like MDA (and their predecessors) focused primarily on โbuilding things and selling them to governments,โ but thatโs changed tremendously over the past while. Governments do still buy spacecraft and parts from private enterprise, but theyโre also more and more reliant on private enterprise to provide space-based services: including communications, Earth observation and infrastructure.ย
He sees a big driver of the new space economy being governmentsโ โtransition to purchasing commercial services.โ That has lead to a โduality,โ he said, where the increasing integration of commercial and governmental operations has risen to the point where โwe’re seeing increasing levels of commercial personnel working in commercial integration cells inside departments of defence secure satellite operation centersโ, as โmilitary operations of satellites and commercial operations of satellites are very, very tightly interconnected.โย
This transition to government-as-service-consumer is well-known; itโs a key part of NASAโs approach to low Earth orbit (LEO) going forward. This includes the retirement of the ISS and the development of privately-owned and operated space stations, which Greenley said โopens up a much more active conversationโ regarding the growth of the business of providing space infrastructure.
But while government clients are the โanchorโ and a still-very-necessary part of the space economy, Greenley said that what truly makes the space business accelerate is they start getting commercial clients. He said that โwhen any market lane opens up and becomes more commercial, it explodes, and it moves at a much faster pace,โ pointing to the tremendous growth of the private space launch market as a great example. In MDAโs case, he said that they have โabout a $13 billion pipeline right now of constellations that weโre bidding digital satellites into, with customers that are interested in working in broadband networks, direct-to-device communications, and the Internet of Things.โ โAlmost all that pipeline is commercial,โ he said, โand it is explosive.โย
Even aside from communications, he sees the growth of the private space stations as potentially transformative as well. Governments are likely to remain the โanchorโ customers for the foreseeable future, but Greenley said that the industrial potential of the satellites is whatโs truly intriguing. โMedical companies, pharmaceutical companies, and a range of industriesโ are looking at the possibilities of microgravity for producing novel therapeutics and other products, and the stations are likely to enjoy steady growth in companies exploring these possibilities over the near term. If the companies hit on successful products, then Greenley said that the space stations could become more akin to โspace industrial parksโ over the next few years.
Earth observation โlast to the partyโ
There was one part of the space sector, however, where Greenley sounded a less optimistic and more cautious note: Earth observation. Greenley said that EO would be โlast to the partyโ for explosive commercial growth, raising the question of whether EO will even achieve it at all over the near term.ย
Greenley was clear that EO was still very much reliant on one all-important clientele: national security and defence. โWhat I see,โ he said, โis that [you] still need a really strong defence and intelligence customer base if you’re going to have a larger scale Earth observation business,โ and that having that base is all-important for any kind of scale-up. EO companies are looking for commercial clients; Greenley said that โwe all dream about it [and] all work on it,โ but โwe’re not seeing that in Earth observation data and services.โ There are smaller clients that are suitable for smaller companies, but any company aiming to scale beyond a โ10 to $20 million a year businessโ has little choice but to focus on acquiring and retaining government clients focused on defence and intelligence.
This isnโt for lack of innovation or willingness to collaborate. Greenley said that government-commercial collaboration is very much present in the EO market, as is an overall collaborative approach to service provision. โItโs about collaboration between [satellite constellations] and between companies,โ he said, as the industry transitions to providing multi-sensor information products for customers. An example he gave was the Maritime Information Platform (MIPS), which provides invaluable information used for dark vessel detection in tracking illegal fishing and maritime security issues. EO companies can now give them a โsensor-fused information source for their maritime economic zones or maritime areas of interest,โ using not just MDAโs radar sensors but information provided by their partners.ย
The work theyโre doing in providing accessible information for government clients is creating โan innovation pathโ, he said, which is driving โcurrent growth and future activity in the Earth observation sector.โย
The issue is that the โbreakthroughโ of commercial clients for EO simply hasnโt happened yet, as the companies lack the so-called โkiller appโ that brings EO into the commercial mainstream. EO companiesโ challenge is to convince corporations that this information is โcritical to their competitiveness in the market and their business success.โย
He believes that โadvanced product managementโ is key to overcoming this issue, so that EO companies can โfigure out how to configure [these] increasingly fused information sources [into cohesive and accessible] information productsโ which invite persistent work from private corporations. This is, he said, what may help EO break out of the โpockets of little bursts of commercial activityโ that theyโre seeing now, and start becoming a space-based corporate mainstay like communications or launch.ย
In the question-and-answer session, he elaborated on the issue. He said that defence and commercial work arenโt mutually exclusive. โDefence and intelligence is a rock,โ he said, โand there are solid needs for that around the world.โ That rock of defence work โgives us that solid foundation to stand onโ as companies look for commercial applications. He said that the โnut thatโs still to be crackedโ for EO is finding enterprises that see critical importance in โnear real-time [change detection information] on the Earth’s surface.โ In order to open up the market, EO companies โall have to work togetherโฆto find out what the major differentiating thing [is] that some corporation canโt live without.โย
โWeโve got lots of little ones,โ he said, โbut in terms of the big ones, that drive big stuff, I think thatโs still to come.โย
