Airbus Defence and Space adds DMC EO data to its portfolio

By on 11 November, 2014

DMCii Australia

Airbus Defence and Space has announced that the data and application services of DMC International Imaging Ltd. (DMCii), UK, will now be available through its Geo-Intelligence programme line, thus further enhancing its Earth observation-based products and services portfolio.

With the DMC satellites, Airbus Defence and Space claims that it now has the largest fleet of Earth observation satellites commercially available today – the two DMC satellites alone being capable of acquiring more than 10,000,000 km² per day.

The offer of DMCii, a 100% subsidiary of Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd (SSTL) which itself is a subsidiary of Airbus Defence and Space, is a natural fit with the company’s geo-intelligence portfolio. With its coordinated DMC satellites, which deliver 22m-resolution, 650km-swath Earth imagery, DMCii specialises in rapidly programmable acquisition campaigns to meet requirements for up-to-date very-large-area imagery.

Bernhard Brenner, head of the Geo-Intelligence programme line at Airbus Defence and Space, said: “We welcome DMCii data and services contributing to the Geo-Intelligence family, not only because of its impressive capabilities. We are also very excited to now have a British element in our constellation. This reflects the strong presence we have had in this country through our geo-intelligence teams for many decades.”

“With DMCii offering large acquisition capacities at 22m resolution, we are able to address the requirements of customers that require regular very-large area coverages and monitoring programmes. This is especially relevant within our current primary markets of agriculture, environment and forestry,” said Martin Philp, general manager of DMCii.

“Collaborating with Airbus Defence and Space’s Geo-Intelligence programme line will enable DMCii to access the global market for DMC data more effectively and offer customers a wider range of value-added services,” said the chairman of DMCii and SSTL, Sir Martin Sweeting.

Airbus Defence and Space’s Constellation of Earth observation satellites already comprises three sets of satellite twins: the very-high-resolution Pléiades twins, high-resolution SPOT 6 and SPOT 7 – spread out on the same orbit with Pléiades and hence guaranteeing daily revisits worldwide – and the weather-independent radar satellites TerraSAR-X and TanDEM-X. The next extension is already on the horizon: In early 2015, the Spanish PAZ (owned and operated by HisdeSAT) is scheduled for launch.

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