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Business Incubation - a real powerhouse for entrepreneurship

Human interaction is one of the core attributes of the incubation process – for companies incubated, for alumni and for the many organisations, businesses and investors who interact with them.

ESA has long been a proponent of the incubation approach for nurturing entrepreneurs and start-up businesses. It’s nearly 20 years since we initiated the ESA Business Incubation Centres (ESA BICs) to inspire and support them to turn their potent ideas into fully-fledged businesses. 

And then, in March 2020, their world changed as the COVID-19 pandemic forced many to work from home, like so many others across our ESA Space Solutions network.

A year or so later, we’re all looking forward with hope to a time when we can get back to face-to-face working on a regular basis. None more so than our entrepreneurs, because human interaction is one of the core attributes of the incubation process – for companies currently being incubated, for alumni who remain a valued part of the ESA Space Solutions network and for the many organisations, businesses and investors who interact with them. 

Why physical presence is the key ingredient in incubation

Much is made of the funding and support – both technical and business – offered as part of incubation, which are important elements enshrined in the ESA BIC approach. Although these are not the only things that make up incubation. If that were the case, we would have no need for physical locations across our 22 Member States; instead, we could simply run everything remotely. 

A remote service that describes itself as an ‘incubator’ is, in truth, not providing ‘incubation’ at all. ‘Virtual incubation’ is a misnomer. I’m not arguing against provision of remote support systems, especially for companies that cannot, for whatever reason, base themselves at an incubator. Maybe they have potential customers and/or suppliers close to their current location or can’t uproot their families. We already provide various kinds of support for these entrepreneurs and will continue to evaluate and evolve our offerings for them in future. 

There is simply no way that a virtual setup can replicate the incredibly valuable spontaneous interactions that happen when you’re in the same place.

However, one key element of incubation, as we know from our two decades of running ESA BICs, is the physical interaction between all the parties involved; for example, during training or at events. What we also know is that incubation is about entrepreneurs supporting each other, which often arises out of unplanned conversations. Peer learning among tenants remains one of the greatest benefits of business incubation, as also recognised by the European Commission and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). There is simply no way that a virtual setup can replicate the incredibly valuable spontaneous interactions that happen when you’re in the same place. 

Some of the start-ups we work with also benefit from use of fabrication laboratories and other physical facilities provided at, or via, the ESA BICs, which they simply would not be able to access otherwise. Those cannot be provided virtually, of course.

Whether or not they are trying to take advantage of start-ups, organisations that have no physical presence but instead offer remote training courses, email introductions to potential vendors, and so on, are not truly offering ‘incubation’. If a remote solution is what a start-up needs, for whatever reason, then bravo! Start-ups can be vulnerable and some entrepreneurs are not always very business-savvy just yet, so it is imperative that we label things correctly. Paying a third party to provide you with merely training and networking services is not incubation.

Staying true to the incubation definition

True incubators are part of a regional economic development strategy and ESA BICs follow the definition of a third-generation business incubator where besides shared office, lab facilities and in-house business support, the access to a professional service network is also offered. ESA extends that definition in that the entrepreneurs produce global solutions using European space assets, such as satellite data, hardware or software that was originally designed for space applications. At the same time, their success provides huge regional benefits, such as employment and increased economic activity, which is why our incubators are co-funded by regional funders.

We know that the pandemic has proved many aspects of business can be done successfully in a virtual way. However, incubation is about creating a start-up community where people are encouraged to interact and share knowledge and resources, and support each other. The way we run our incubation may alter in future in terms of the facilities and events. Also keeping in touch with our alumni community is something where a virtual environment can definitely support beyond the conventional way of social media platforms. The concept of creating a fertile starting culture to provide a powerhouse for entrepreneurship through dedicated incubation in physical ESA BICs will remain.

Cornelis (Niels) Eldering, Head of Section ESA Space Solutions

 

ABOUT ESA SPACE SOLUTIONS

ESA Space Solutions is the go to place for great business ideas involving space in all areas of society and economy. Our mission is to support entrepreneurs in Europe in the development of business using satellite applications and space technology to improve everyday life. ESA Space Solutions is designed to provide multiple entry points such as ESA Business Incubation Centres (ESA BICs), ESA Technology Broker Network, ESA Business Applications Ambassadors and ESA Business Applications programme. Funding typically ranges from €50k to €2M and supports everything from technology transfer, business incubation, Feasibility Studies to large-scale Demonstration Projects.

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ESA has long been a proponent of the incubation approach for nurturing entrepreneurs and start-up businesses. It’s nearly 20 years since we initiated the ESA Business Incubation Centres (ESA BICs) to inspire and support them to turn their potent ideas into fully-fledged businesses.

And then, in March 2020, their world changed as the COVID-19 pandemic forced many to work from home, like so many others across our ESA Space Solutions network.

‘Eye’ of Athens – the newest ESA telescope will hunt for objects of universal scale

What happens near a black hole? How does ordinary matter come together in the large-scale structures we see today? How do black holes grow and shape the universe and what is the relationship between these processes? 

All these questions will be answered very soon by the Athena advanced telescope for high-energy astrophysics. “Athena will be a state-of-the-art observatory that will provide a significant leap forward in scientific capabilities compared with previous X-ray missions, and will address fundamental open questions in astrophysics,” says Alvaro Giménez, Director of Science and Robotic Exploration at the European Space Agency (ESA).

Austrian RHP Technology GmbH stands ready to contribute to ESA’s second ‘Large-class’ science mission. A total of six test parts have already been manufactured, which RHP Technology GmbH conducted in cooperation with AAC Aerospace and Advanced Composites and FOTEC Forschungs-und Technologietransfer GmbH.

The prototype is a 3D-printed and partly processed version of what may someday become the ‘eye’ of the ESA X-ray telescope Athena. This test structure was produced by an ESA-led 3D project to evaluate a promising method called ‘Plasma Metal Deposition’. 

“The project’s goal was to evaluate the technology’s ability to produce space hardware and  components larger than 0.5m,” explains ESA materials engineer Laurent Pambaguian. Dr. Erich Neubauer, Managing Director & Owner of RHP Technology GmbH says: “More than 80% of material is wasted by using a traditional method of manufacturing; which is typically milling from a block. By using our Plasma Metal Deposition technology, we were able to demonstrate a significant material and cost saving”. 

Inside the 3D printer for large parts (Image credit: RHP Technology)

“We examined the entire process chain, including subsequent heat treatment and post-processing, as well as 3D printing, using titanium alloys either as metal particles or as wire material. The result has demonstrated good mechanical properties and finishing, signifying that we are capable to advance the technology, including the investigation of alternative materials.” 

Plasma metal deposition is a candidate for manufacturing large-scale components in the future, such as the Athena mission optical bench, which will be the most complex part ever printed in titanium. 

In a complex structure with many deep pockets tapering to a maximum height of 30 cm, the optical bench aligns and secures around 750 mirror modules. The overall shape must be accurate to within a few ten micrometers – or thousandths of a centimetre. “RHP demonstrated that large 3D parts can be printed for space applications. In the future this technology can be used for applications on Earth such as industrial, aeronautics or automotive applications,” says Susanne Katzler Fuchs from Brimatech, the Technology Transfer Broker for ESA Space Solutions in Austria.

When ESA's Athena satellite is launched in 2031, it will be 10-100 times deeper than in previous X-ray missions to observe the hottest, high-energy celestial objects. 

 

ABOUT ESA SPACE SOLUTIONS

ESA Space Solutions is the go to place for great business ideas involving space in all areas of society and economy. Our mission is to support entrepreneurs in Europe in the development of business using satellite applications and space technology to improve everyday life. ESA Space Solutions is designed to provide multiple entry points such as ESA Business Incubation Centres (ESA BICs), ESA Technology Broker Network, ESA Business Applications Ambassadors and ESA Business Applications programme. Funding typically ranges from €50k to €2M and supports everything from technology transfer, business incubation, Feasibility Studies to large-scale Demonstration Projects.

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What happens near a black hole? How does ordinary matter come together in the large-scale structures we see today? How do black holes grow and shape the universe and what is the relationship between these processes? 

All these questions will be answered very soon by the Athena advanced telescope for high-energy astrophysics. “Athena will be a state-of-the-art observatory that will provide a significant leap forward in scientific capabilities compared with previous X-ray missions, and will address fundamental open questions in astrophysics,” says Alvaro Giménez, Director of Science and Robotic Exploration at the European Space Agency (ESA).

Real estate lawyers use satellite imagery to save time and money

 Orbital Witness is helping to cut costs and paperwork for real estate lawyers by using historic high resolution satellite imagery (Image credit: Sergey Nivens/Shutterstock)

Property tech start-up Orbital Witness is bringing a new way of thinking to property transactions. The London-based company won ‘IT Product of the Year’ at the British Legal Technology Awards 2020 in November with a unique product, developed in collaboration with ESA Space Solutions.

Orbital Witness’s hunch that property due diligence was trapped in the past (slow, costly, and an ‘indemnity hot potato’) turned out to be correct. With the support of ESA Space Solutions, the team has now created a platform for real estate lawyers to review and understand property risks with a much higher degree of insight and efficiency than has previously been possible.  

Time travel for real estate

Many questions in real estate law have a historic dimension but until now there’s been no easy way for a real estate lawyer to ‘look back in time’ and make enquiries relating to the past. Lawyers have had no choice but to carry out lengthy investigative processes or, on occasion, manually acquire aerial photography.

Orbital Witness now arms users with detailed historic information at the outset of a property transaction, using satellite imagery archives for a historic overview.

“Orbital Witness uses archives of very high-resolution (sub-1m) optical satellite imagery with enough clarity for real estate professionals to be able to spot important details such as a change of use at a site, a structural change to a property, or a boundary movement,” says Fausto Vieira, Technical Officer at ESA.

“The space added value of this satellite imagery provides the first standardised view for real estate professionals to visualise and give a reliable legal indication of the historic development of a site. It’s doubly impressive as this platform has the power to aggregate data from multiple sources.”

The pilot demonstration in collaboration with ESA Space Solutions saw the successful integration of satellite imagery archives and property datasets (such as contextual information sourced from places such as HM Land Registry) into a production-ready real estate intelligence platform. 

Example of archives of historic satellite imagery being displayed alongside property boundaries. (Image credit: Orbital Witness)

“This has the potential to reduce the cost and turnaround time it takes for property lawyers to deliver accurate and immediate insights to clients,” says Will Pearce, Co-Founder, Orbital Witness.  “Lawyers can finally start spending time on higher-value advisory work instead of lengthy, paper based due diligence.” 

Orbital Witness’ vision is to eventually build a ‘Universal Risk Rating’ for all types of property transactions – a solution that has the potential to automate due diligence for property transactions. 

“It’s a revolution in common sense where access to property information is front-loaded and simplified so anyone interested in real estate can get a clear picture of a property before spending significant amounts of time or money,” says Pearce. 

Orbital Witness, also an ESA BIC alumnus, is already at a commercial phase with a range of first customers adopting the product even before the end of the project. An extension to the project is currently being prepared, expanding the reach of the application to insurance and surveying sectors.

 

ABOUT ESA SPACE SOLUTIONS

ESA Space Solutions is the go to place for great business ideas involving space in all areas of society and economy. Our mission is to support entrepreneurs in Europe in the development of business using satellite applications and space technology to improve everyday life. ESA Space Solutions is designed to provide multiple entry points such as ESA Business Incubation Centres (ESA BICs), ESA Technology Broker Network, ESA Business Applications Ambassadors and ESA Business Applications programme. Funding typically ranges from €50k to €2M and supports everything from technology transfer, business incubation, Feasibility Studies to large-scale Demonstration Projects.

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Property tech start-up Orbital Witness is bringing a new way of thinking to property transactions. The London-based company won ‘IT Product of the Year’ at the British Legal Technology Awards 2020 in November with a unique product, developed in collaboration with ESA Space Solutions.