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Home / Technology / Space Procurement: 'Commercial' Definition Blurred

Space Procurement: 'Commercial' Definition Blurred

28 Jan

•

Summary

  • A new study critiques the broad use of 'commercial' in space procurement.
  • US and Europe define commercial space differently, impacting risk and control.
  • Ambiguity in 'commercial' terms can lead to mismatched expectations and inefficiency.
Space Procurement: 'Commercial' Definition Blurred

A recent report highlights a growing concern regarding the definition of "going commercial" in space procurement. The study, released January 28, indicates that the elastic use of the term "commercial" risks obscuring the actual nature of public agencies' space-related purchases. Both the United States and European nations are increasing their reliance on private space companies, but their approaches and motivations differ significantly.

The United States typically utilizes fixed-price contracts and competition to transfer cost and technical risks to industry. In contrast, European governments often combine commercial language with substantial public oversight, driven by goals of industrial policy, sovereignty, and strategic autonomy. This divergence can lead to mismatched expectations and inefficiencies.

The report categorizes commercial procurement into three types: "Commercial-Lite," where governments retain most risk; "Commercial-Led," involving government support to de-risk development; and "Purely Commercial," where governments buy existing off-the-shelf services. The analysis of European and US programs suggests that many initiatives labeled commercial still involve significant public control or government de-risking, rather than being purely market-driven.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
The main criticism is that the term 'commercial' has become too broadly defined, potentially obscuring what public agencies are actually buying and why.
The US often uses fixed-price contracts to shift risk to industry, while European governments tend to pair commercial language with strong public control for industrial policy and autonomy.
The report categorizes commercial procurement into 'Commercial-Lite,' 'Commercial-Led,' and 'Purely Commercial' efforts.

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