Future of NewSpace & Satellites: Insights on Global Challenges
The Future of NewSpace: How Reflex Aerospace Is Shaping a Smarter, Faster European Space Industry
At DLD 2023, Reflex Aerospaceās Co-Founder and CEO Walter Ballheimer joined Bulent Altan, Founding Partner at Alpine Space Ventures, for a forward-looking discussion on the global challenges and opportunities defining the NewSpace industry. The panel, āThe Future of NewSpace & Satellites,ā explored how Europeās emerging space ecosystem is transforming from state-driven programs into a fast-moving, innovation-led marketplace.
What Is āNewSpaceā?
As Altan explains, traditional, or āOld Space,ā was defined by slow, government-funded projects designed to last decades, often focused on defense and national strategy. NewSpace, by contrast, is entrepreneurial, investor-backed, and commercially scalable. It leverages venture capital, rapid prototyping, and agile development to make space technology accessible for new markets - from communications to climate monitoring.
Ballheimer described Reflex Aerospaceās role in this shift: āWe build satellites because space allows us to tackle truly global, existential challenges, from secure communication networks to environmental monitoring.ā
Faster Cycles, Smarter Satellites
Reflex Aerospace is pioneering a faster, more cost-effective way to design and build satellites. Traditional projects can take four to five years to complete; Reflex aims to cut that cycle to under a year, removing unnecessary complexity while maintaining mission-grade reliability. āOur approach is to do things as good as necessary, not as expensive as possible,ā Ballheimer said.
The result is a new generation of high-performance, customizable small satellites that can be produced quickly and tailored for specific mission - a cornerstone of Europeās emerging sovereign space capability.
Space as Critical Infrastructure
The panel also addressed how satellite connectivity and observation are becoming the backbone of modern infrastructure. From Starlinkās global communication network to Earth observation systems that detect COā levels or track deforestation, space technology is now central to how societies operate, defend, and evolve.
Yet with opportunity comes responsibility. Both Altan and Ballheimer highlighted the need for space traffic management, debris mitigation, and spectrum regulation to ensure sustainable growth as the number of satellites climbs toward 35,000 by 2030.
Europeās Next Leap
Ballheimer emphasized that Europe must take bold steps to remain competitive: āWe need commercial, European-built solutions to secure our place in orbit.ā Reflex Aerospace is at the heart of that effort, merging German engineering precision with NewSpace agility to deliver satellites that serve Europeās strategic, commercial, and environmental goals.
As the DLD discussion made clear, NewSpace is not about exploration, itās about evolution. And companies like Reflex Aerospace are ensuring that evolution happens right here in Europe.