Markets > Commercial

Commercial Services for the Next Generation of Space Operations

Graviron is developing technologies for active debris removal, satellite inspection, in-space servicing, and future orbital manufacturing capabilities.

What We Are Building

From Debris Removal to Orbital Manufacturing

The commercial space industry is moving beyond launching satellites. Future growth will require companies capable of maintaining assets, removing hazards, extending mission life, and eventually manufacturing products in orbit.

Active Debris Removal

Remove non-operational objects that threaten spacecraft and satellites.

Satellite Inspection

Inspect satellites in orbit without requiring them to return to Earth.

In-Space Servicing

Future capabilities focused on inspection, maintenance, upgrades, and mission-life extension.

In-Space Manufacturing

Long-term development of manufacturing capabilities that benefit from the space environment. Recent commercial activity has demonstrated growing interest in orbital manufacturing and materials production.

Why These Markets Matter

A Growing Need for In-Orbit Services

More Satellites Than Ever

Orbital activity continues to increase, creating demand for inspection, maintenance, and sustainability services.

Growing Debris Population

Space debris removal is emerging as an independent commercial market driven by orbital congestion and sustainability requirements.

Shift Toward Serviceable Spacecraft

Industry interest in satellite servicing, repair, and mission-life extension continues to grow as operators seek greater value from existing assets.

Service Roadmap

Building Capabilities Step by Step

Timeline

Phase 1

Active Debris Removal

On-Orbit Satellite Inspection

Phase 2

In-Space Servicing

Mission Life Extension

Orbital Infrastructure Support

Phase 3

Orbital Manufacturing

Space-Based Relay Networks

Advanced Commercial Services

Future Orbital Infrastructure

Beyond Individual Missions

Over the long term, Graviron is exploring technologies that support persistent operations in space, including orbital manufacturing, relay networks, and future infrastructure that enables activity beyond Earth orbit.

Who We Work With

Graviron is developing commercial capabilities for organizations that operate spacecraft, build space infrastructure, conduct research, and create new businesses in orbit. As the commercial space economy expands, demand for debris removal, satellite servicing, orbital manufacturing, and infrastructure support is expected to grow across multiple sectors.

Satellite Operators

Organizations responsible for operating and maintaining satellites throughout their mission lifecycle.

Future capabilities such as debris removal, satellite inspection, and servicing can help operators protect assets and extend mission value.

Research Organizations

Universities, laboratories, and research institutions exploring new technologies, materials, and manufacturing processes in space.

Future orbital platforms may create opportunities for scientific experimentation and in-space production.

Space Infrastructure Companies

Companies developing communications networks, orbital platforms, space-based data systems, and other infrastructure that supports activity in space.

Commercial investment in orbital infrastructure continues to accelerate as the space economy grows. 

Commercial Space Ventures

Startups and commercial ventures developing new products and services that rely on access to orbital infrastructure and long-duration space operations.

The commercial space sector is expanding beyond traditional satellite businesses into entirely new markets and services.

Interested in Future Commercial Missions?

Organizations interested in debris removal, satellite inspection, servicing, or future orbital infrastructure capabilities can register interest and engage with the Graviron team.

Frequently Asked Questions

Have any question before reaching out? Explore answers to some of the most common inquiries about Graviron, our technology, opportunities, and how to get in touch with the right team.

What commercial services is Graviron developing?

Graviron is developing technologies for active debris removal, on-orbit satellite inspection, in-space servicing, and future in-space manufacturing capabilities.

Our long-term vision also includes orbital infrastructure that supports sustained operations in space, including future communications and relay networks.

The Orbit Keeper program is currently in development.

Graviron is targeting demonstration missions in the 2028–2029 timeframe, followed by initial commercial operations around 2030. Development timelines may evolve as the program progresses.

Yes.

Organizations interested in future debris removal, satellite inspection, servicing, manufacturing, or infrastructure-related missions can contact Graviron to discuss potential mission requirements and future opportunities.

No.

Graviron is focused on developing orbital capabilities and services. Launch services may be provided through third-party launch providers depending on mission requirements.

Active debris removal involves identifying, approaching, and removing non-operational objects from orbit that may pose risks to satellites, spacecraft, and future missions.

It is one of the initial commercial capabilities being explored through the Orbit Keeper program.

On-orbit satellite inspection involves observing and assessing the condition of spacecraft already operating in space.

Inspection missions can help operators understand the status of their assets, investigate anomalies, and gather information without requiring a spacecraft to return to Earth.

In-space servicing refers to future capabilities that may include inspection, maintenance, upgrades, relocation, and mission-life extension for spacecraft operating in orbit.

These capabilities are part of Graviron’s long-term commercial roadmap.

In-space manufacturing involves producing materials or products in the space environment rather than on Earth.

Microgravity can enable manufacturing processes that are difficult or impossible to achieve on the ground, opening new opportunities for advanced materials and future space-based industries.

Potential users include satellite operators, infrastructure providers, research organizations, government agencies, and commercial space companies seeking services that support long-term operations in space.

Organizations can register interest through Graviron’s Early Access Program to receive updates, discuss future mission concepts, and explore potential collaboration opportunities as commercial capabilities mature.