Space
Space News on EU Wall Street covers the companies, agencies, technologies, investments, policies, and commercial forces shaping Europe’s space industry and the wider global space economy. This category follows satellite operators, launch providers, space agencies, defence contractors, telecommunications firms, Earth observation companies, space startups, research institutions, investors, and governments involved in building the next generation of space infrastructure.
Space has become a strategic industry with direct importance for communications, navigation, climate monitoring, national security, financial markets, agriculture, transport, energy, disaster response, and scientific discovery. Across Europe, the sector is shaped by public funding, private investment, satellite demand, launch competition, defence priorities, international partnerships, regulation, supply chains, and the growing commercial value of data collected from orbit. This section examines how companies, policymakers, engineers, investors, and institutions respond to the opportunities and risks of a more competitive space economy.
Readers can expect serious coverage of satellite launches, space exploration, European Space Agency programmes, commercial launch activity, defence and security applications, space-based internet, Earth observation, climate monitoring, navigation systems, space regulation, venture capital, mergers and acquisitions, and the financial performance of companies connected to the sector. The category also connects space developments to wider business and policy themes, including telecom infrastructure, aerospace manufacturing, cybersecurity, energy transition, environmental monitoring, industrial strategy, and geopolitical competition.
Space News is designed for readers who want clear and authoritative coverage of space as both a scientific frontier and a serious economic sector. It explains how space technology affects businesses, governments, investors, and everyday life without relying on hype or technical complexity. Coverage may include European satellite projects, launch market competition, space defence spending, commercial partnerships, space data services, and the role of private capital in expanding the industry.
By covering space through the lens of business, technology, policy, and investment, EU Wall Street gives readers a professional view of one of the fastest-evolving strategic industries. This category helps explain how satellites, launch systems, data, regulation, and international competition are shaping Europe’s position in the global space economy.