ESA title

CONTACT US

Learning Hub The ESA Learning Hub is a web-based platform which provides access to training courses and materials linked to ESA programs and initiatives

Matchmaking ESA-Match is a platform that lets companies showcase their competences and capabilities, find partners, explore commercial opportunities and establish business relationships

Intellectual Property ESA makes its intellectual property available to European space companies within its 22 Member States, on a freely-licensed basis

ESA Patents

CONTACT US

    * Mandatory field

    News

    Europe Advances First In-Orbit Docking and Refilling Demonstration

    The Exploration Company moves ahead with Europe’s first in-orbit docking & refilling demonstration for space transportation

    Europe is shaping its capabilities to act in space.

    Within ESA’s programme for future space transportation, FLPP, In-Space Proof-of-Concepts (InSPoC) is now entering its consolidation toward final implementation and in-orbit demonstration. The Exploration Company has been awarded the contract for the Consolidation Phase (~Phase B2) of InSPoC-1, marking the next step toward demonstrating Europe’s capability for orbital rendezvous, docking, and non-cryogenic refilling.

    The InSPoC venture is aimed at providing Europe with key capabilities to act in space, working toward enabling an in-space logistics ecosystem. InSPoC-1 focuses on the capabilities that make in-space logistics possible – in-orbit rendezvous, docking, and propellant transfer between spacecraft.

    These capabilities are essential to Odyssey, ESA’s future flagship programme deploying in-orbit refilling services, which will enable a wide range of applications, from distributed in-orbit refilling in the vicinity of Earth, which serve dual-use applications, to centralised orbital propellant depots, which support exploration missions.

    “Europe has a timely window of opportunity to secure a leading role in the orbital economy and to ensure the resilience of its space infrastructure. The InSPoC-1 project is a foundational step in this direction,” said Yann Tincelin, InSPoC Manager. “InSPoC-1 is spearheading a coordinated approach in Europe to ensure that future spacecraft can operate together through shared, interoperable interfaces.”

    Jérôme Breteau, Head of Future Space Transportation at ESA; Benjamin Kawak, The Exploration Company; and Yann Tincelin, InSPoC Manager

    InSPoC-1 will derisk, demonstrate and share with the SpaceTech ecosystem two key interfaces referred to as Minimum Viable Products (MVPs):

    • MVP-1 pertains to rendezvous guidelines & GNC-related interfaces, that will be released to ensure different spacecraft can perform safe collaborative rendezvous together, with shared visual markers and high-level rendezvous protocols,
    • MVP-2 is related to the Docking and Refilling interface, promoting modularity and interoperability, with a release of the agreed technical interface specifications (known as the Interface Control Document, ICD), fostering a wide adoption of its passive side, and leaving most of the active side open for innovation.

    Following a competitive procurement process under FLPP, the Consolidation Phase contract for InSPoC-1 has been awarded to a European consortium led by The Exploration Company from Germany.

    The Exploration Company’s award was announced at the FLPP Autumn Session in Paris, where ESA presented recent milestones across Europe’s in-space transportation efforts.

    “InSPoC-1 is about execution and adoption. In Phase B2 we take docking, refilling, and power-data transfer to a prototype proven in a relevant environment. We will channel results through the Users’ Club and the Standardisation Committee so primes and SMEs can align on practical interfaces. That is how Europe scales safe in-orbit services,” said Hélène Huby, CEO of The Exploration Company.

    InSpoC-1 project flyer

    The InSPoC-1 Consolidation Phase will refine system designs, integrate industrial inputs and prepare for the flight demonstration to follow. The final stages, including the in-orbit demonstration, are part of the FLPP proposal for CM25. The enabling interfaces (MVPs) will be consolidated during the ongoing Phase B2 with industry partners and released with open interface architectures, free of export-control, to allow a wide adoption and seamless integration of these interfaces and capabilities.

    These are pre-requisites to ensure European stakeholders operate, interact and provide services within the upcoming orbital market. The aim is to strengthen technical harmonisation and promote interoperability across Europe’s in-space logistics capabilities, and to allow European actors to deploy new services in the orbital economy.

    The in-orbit demonstration is planned for 2028, when two spacecraft, Oura, developed by The Exploration Company, and EROSS, from Thales Alenia Space France, will perform a full sequence of rendezvous, docking, and refilling in orbit.

    By demonstrating technologies incrementally, FLPP brings key components of the future space transportation ecosystem to market faster. This stepwise approach accelerates progress while reducing cost and risk for European companies.

    The current design status, shared reference architecture and next steps for the MVPs will be presented to the European SpaceTech community at the In-Space Transportation Club Session #4 on 9 December 2025.

    Each milestone in the InSPoC roadmap moves Europe closer to operational in-space transportation: connecting industrial capability, shared interfaces and sustainable orbital infrastructure.

    Join the club

    Related news

    29 April 2026
    FIRST! Structures, Materials, Mechanisms and Processes for Space Transportation: ESA invites proposals as new ITT opens after successful Pitch Day

    ESA’s FIRST!(Future Innovation and Research in Space Transportation!) initiative launched it s seventh Invitation to Tender (ITT) last week, this time on the topic of Structures, Materials, Mechanisms and Processes...

    07 April 2026
    Designing for a More Sustainable Future in Space Transportation

    Considering more sustainable methods of developing emerging space transportation technology design is essential in order to secure accessibility to space, avoid impacting negatively on life on Earth and for the...

    30 March 2026
    European Launcher Companies Share Status and Perspectives at ESA’s Second Future Access to Space Club

    As launcher programmes advance across Europe, coordinating shared technical priorities is becoming a defining feature of how future access to space capabilities are being shaped. On 10 March, nearly 70...

    23 March 2026
    Europe’s In-Space Logistics Ecosystem Moves Forward at InSPoC-4 Pitch Day

    ESA and European industry align on requirements for advanced in-space cargo and logistics; Invitation to Tender for year-long system studies launched in March Europe’s in-space logistics infrastructure is taking shape,...

    18 March 2026
    FLPP Spring Session Draws Record Attendance as Europe’s Space Transportation Ambitions Take Shape

    The European Space Agency’s programme for future space transportation, FLPP, brought together 230 onsite participants from 23 European countries in Paris for its Spring Session on 9 March, with more...

    Keep updated on all ESA opportunities

    Subscribe to our newsletter or visit our Help page for quick answers

    Subscribe to newsletter Get Help