Amid strained alliances with the United States, countries including Germany, Spain, and Canada are committing significant funds to develop independent rocket programs for national security. These efforts aim to reduce reliance on foreign launch providers like SpaceX. The investments support startups working toward orbital launches in the coming years.
No country is poised to challenge the dominance of the United States and China in space launches soon, but several US allies view sovereign access to space as essential for defense. This push comes as relations with the Trump administration deteriorate, marked by tariffs, trade disputes, and threats against NATO members. Foreign leaders' wariness has increased due to the US president's ties with Elon Musk, whose SpaceX dominates commercial launches.
Commercial firms will likely continue selecting SpaceX for cost and reliability, but government-backed satellites often require domestic rockets. In Europe, the European Space Agency and European Union favor European vehicles; they used SpaceX temporarily while awaiting the Ariane 6, which is now operational.
Germany leads with $41 billion in space spending planned over five years. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius stated, “Satellite networks today are an Achilles’ heel of modern societies. Whoever attacks them paralyzes entire nations.” In late 2024, the government allocated over $110 million to startups Isar Aerospace, Rocket Factory Augsburg, and HyImpulse. Isar, with $650 million in private funding, attempted its first orbital launch last year but failed; a second test is imminent.
Spain has unlocked $200 million through the ESA’s European Launcher Challenge for PLD Space’s Miura 5, set for demonstration flights this year, plus $47 million nationally. Science Minister Diana Morant said, “We have supported PLD Space at the national level until now... We will now also do so through ESA.”
The United Kingdom invested $27 million in Orbex before its recent insolvency, with $170 million pledged to the ESA challenge. Canada announced $130 million in November to enable launches by 2028, supporting firms like Maritime Launch Services. Australia’s Gilmour Space received $50 million from a public fund after a failed test last July, aiming to bolster the Eris rocket. NRFC CEO David Gall noted, “By building sovereign space capability... Gilmour’s efforts will secure Australia’s access to essential space services.”
Brazil, Taiwan, Argentina, and others like the UAE pursue similar goals, though progress varies amid funding challenges and historical setbacks, such as Brazil’s 2003 launch pad explosion that killed 21 technicians.