Lusíada constellation: Portugal puts three poets in orbit, bringing its satellite fleet to eight
Portugal's Lusíada constellation now has eight satellites in orbit. Florbela Espanca, Miguel Torga and Cesário Verde launched on a Falcon 9 to expand the 'Waze of the oceans'.
Portugal has just sent three poets into space. Florbela Espanca, Miguel Torga and Cesário Verde are the names of the newest satellites in the Lusíada constellation, launched this week aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 on the Transporter-17 mission from Vandenberg, California. With this batch, Portuguese company LusoSpace now has eight satellites in orbit.
What is the Lusíada constellation for?
Think of it as a Waze of the oceans: a communications and data-sharing network for the maritime sector, fitted with AIS and VDES technology to track ships, improve surveillance and safety at sea, and support search-and-rescue operations. The three poets join Camões, Fernando Pessoa, Agustina Bessa-Luís, José Saramago and PoSat-2 — with four more satellites still to come before the twelve-strong constellation is complete.
How much does the Lusíada constellation cost?
The project represents a 15-million-euro investment, 10 million of it financed by Portugal’s Recovery and Resilience Plan, as laid out in the official PRR project note. For a Lisbon-founded company, it’s one of those cases where European money literally leaves the atmosphere.
Portugal’s space ambitions keep climbing — and in a summer when the world is meeting in Geneva to work out how to govern AI, there’s something comforting about national technology being busy watching the sea, under the names of people who wrote about it.
By Oliver Grant
Image: NASA Headquarters / NASA/Aubrey Gemignani / Wikimedia Commons (public domain)