Issue 107

Commercial Remote Sensing Competition

2 Oct: The Center for Strategic International Studies (CSIS) released their analysis of publicly purchasable remote sensing data from different providers across metrics like ground sample distance, resolution, collection capacity, and revisit rates. The CSIS study is a follow-on to a 2021 report from the U.S. National…

2 Oct: The Center for Strategic International Studies (CSIS) released their analysis of publicly purchasable remote sensing data from different providers across metrics like ground sample distance, resolution, collection capacity, and revisit rates. The CSIS study is a follow-on to a 2021 report from the U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) report which also compared the performance of commercial satellite imaging systems. CSIS 2024 results showed some improvement in US performance, however China won the most Gold Medals (5) and was on top of the total medal count (14). Excerpts below. Read full report.

– Of 11 performance categories, Chinese systems garnered the gold medal in five areas and U.S. systems in four areas, with Finland and South Korea each securing a gold medal.

– Nearly half of the podium spots went to satellite systems launched from 2021-2024, showing a large amount of dynamism within the last four years and the speed at which more advanced capabilities are being introduced in the global commercial marketplace.

– The 2024 winners spotlight the continued advancement of China’s remote sensing capabilities and the expansion of its commercial space sector. Commercial remote sensing is one dimension of a broader space competition as Beijing continues to execute its vision of leading the world in space, among other key technology sectors.

-The assessment covered 11 categories of performance across electro-optical (EO), synthetic aperture radar (SAR), and infrared (IR)


  • modalities. 9 categories are similar to those used by NGA in 2021, and two categories have been added…The research team did not contact Chinese system owners, which could introduce both favorable and unfavorable effects for Chinese systems in the rankings.

    – The Most notable in the EO categories is China’s rise to gold in EO imaging capability, with its SuperView Neo-1 system, launched in 2022, offering a commercial product that combines high-resolution imagery with the largest constellation collection capacity…Jilin-1 EO systems hold the top spot in EO revisit, owing to its large constellation of over 100 operational satellites in orbit.

    – SAR X-band imaging performance saw a complete shake-up on the podium this year, with the three medalists being all new systems-U.S. Umbra SAR (gold), U.S. Capella Space Acadia (silver), and Finnish ICEYE Generation 3 (bronze)-launched in the 2022—2023 timeframe…Chinese firms have made less progress in X-band SAR, they lead the pack in C-band SAR. C-band SAR provides lower-resolution radar imagery over larger areas.

    -In the category of long-wave infrared (LWIR), Chinese commercial systems are dominant… Changes to U.S. regulatory restrictions on infrared imaging will enable U.S. companies to test this commercial market, with two U.S. companies planning to launch systems in 2025.

    Should any one country dominate the commercial remote sensing market, not only could it gain economic advantages, but it would also control the information narrative about the entire planet, from the environment to natural resources to human conflict.