Space Economy · French Guiana
Key Facts
—The bet. Spain’s PLD Space is putting thirty-five million euros, about forty-one million dollars, into its own launch pad at Kourou in French Guiana.
—The first. It becomes the first private operator to commit money on this scale at Europe’s historic spaceport.
—Local spend. Thirteen million euros, around fifteen million dollars, goes straight to more than twenty firms based in French Guiana.
—The rocket. The pad is for the Miura five, a small orbital launcher aiming for its first test flight late this year.
—The backers. A funding round led by Mitsubishi Electric and a European Investment Bank loan have lifted total funding above three hundred and fifty million euros.
—The theme. Europe wants its own commercial route to orbit, and this is a private foothold at the continent’s gateway.
A new PLD Space launch complex in French Guiana marks the first time a private company has put serious money into Europe’s storied spaceport, planting commercial new-space capital on South American soil.
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What the PLD Space launch complex is
PLD Space is a Spanish rocket company founded in Elche in two thousand eleven. It announced the thirty-five million euro commitment at the Choose France investment event in Versailles in early June.
The firm was started by two founders, Raúl Torres and Raúl Verdú, and now employs more than four hundred people. It runs sites in Spain and Oman alongside the new base in Kourou.
The money builds and equips a launch pad at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, on the northern coast of South America. That base is where Europe’s Ariane rockets have flown for decades.
What makes the move notable is the ownership. The company says it is the first private operator to spend at this scale on its own complex at the site, rather than renting access from the state.
For a foreign reader, the simplest way to picture it is a private firm building its own terminal at an airport that governments have always run. The pad sits on the old Diamant rocket zone, now reborn for commercial use.
Why French Guiana matters for launches
French Guiana is an overseas region of France, which makes it European soil despite sitting on the South American mainland. It lies close to the equator, where the planet’s spin gives rockets a useful extra push.
That geography is why Europe chose Kourou as its spaceport back in the nineteen sixties. The open ocean to the east gives a clear, safe path for launches.
The territory leans heavily on the space sector, which has long accounted for roughly a quarter of its output. That dependence is also a weakness, leaving the local economy exposed when launch activity dips.
This is where the local-spending pledge matters. Of the total, thirteen million euros flows directly to more than twenty companies based in French Guiana, many of them small firms.
The money and the timeline
The pad is being built for the Miura five, a small satellite launcher. Civil works are in their final phase and should finish by the middle of this year, with a first test flight targeted for late in the year.
The pieces of the launch system are being finished in Spain and shipped across the Atlantic to Kourou. They will be assembled there with help from the French space agency.
The spending is backed by deep pockets. A large funding round led by Japan’s Mitsubishi Electric, which also signed on as a customer, and a loan from the European Investment Bank have pushed total funding past three hundred and fifty million euros.
Using official local multipliers, the company expects the work to add about twenty-one million euros of value on the ground. It should also support a few hundred jobs during construction.
Why it matters for investors
The bigger story is the scramble for Europe’s own route to orbit. As small satellites multiply, the market for launching them is forecast to more than double by the end of the decade.
Governments increasingly treat launch capacity as strategic infrastructure rather than a commercial nicety. That shift is pulling private money and public backing toward firms that can reach orbit from European soil.
PLD Space’s edge for now is simple. While some rivals are still testing their rockets, it expects to own a finished, working launch complex before the year is out.
The real test comes next. Building a pad is one thing, but turning it into a steady stream of paying launches is what separates a rocket project from a business.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the PLD Space launch complex in French Guiana?
It is a privately owned launch pad that Spain’s PLD Space is building at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou for thirty-five million euros, about forty-one million dollars. The company says it is the first private operator to invest on this scale at Europe’s historic spaceport.
Why build a launch site in French Guiana?
French Guiana is an overseas region of France, so it counts as European territory, and it sits near the equator where the planet’s spin helps lift rockets. The open ocean to the east offers a safe launch path, which is why Europe has used Kourou as its spaceport for decades.
When will the first launch happen?
Construction of the pad should be complete by the middle of this year. The company is targeting the first test flight of its Miura five orbital rocket from Kourou late in the year.
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