@spaceflight,

I'm rooting for Ariane! They have been successful so far.

The European space industry’s gross output is growing faster than the US’s. From 2016-2019, US gross output decreased, while the Europeans experienced growth in gross output and employment.

https://twitter.com/lionnetpierre/status/1533552816291209217?s=46&t=EUNxRJ2QLFsizCjDnIafTw

Pierre Lionnet on Twitter

“@JFK33331 @momentusspace European space industry gross output growth and job creation outperformed its US equivalent in the past decade. Sources: USA https://t.co/huYZTwvtCK & Europe https://t.co/Puil6JCLlZ”

Twitter
@mgnv The #European #space industry doesn't consist of Arianespace only https://commercialisation.esa.int/startups/

@spaceflight, something must be going right for there to be better growth. The Ariane and Vega rockets take many European payloads.

For example, the Pléiades-Neo Airbus satellites were recently launched by a pair of Vega rockets, which cost less to launch than an F9. These were rideshare missions, too, so the cost savings were even greater. The satellites created value for Europe, and the launch segment helped enable that value creation.

https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/pleiades-neo.htm

Pléiades-Neo 3, 4, 5, 6 (VHR-2020 1, 2, 3, 4)

Pléiades-Neo, initally also known as VHR-2020, is a four-satellite very high resolution earth observation satellite constellation by Airbus Defenc...

Gunter's Space Page
Cost of space launches to low Earth orbit

An interactive visualization from Our World in Data.

Our World in Data

@spaceflight

Ariane recently launched the James Webb Space Telescope, which no other rocket could have done. In that mission, they increased the lifespan of JWST because of the rocket's extra performance. The Ariane 5 can launch satellites that aren't suited for other rockets.

Again, the proof is in the pudding! Something is going right in Europe and Ariane with all that growth, haha

@mgnv so why do you think "no other rocket could have done" that ?
FAQ Full General Public Webb Telescope/NASA

James Webb Space Telescope

@mgnv yes, "in the early 2000's"

@spaceflight

Another reason the A5 was selected is the wider fairing diameter.

Also, the A5 is competitively priced for dedicated launches with the falcon heavy. They regularly launch large satellites.

@spaceflight

The attached graph is from 1991 till 2021

Ariane 5 went into service in 2003, and the Vega rocket in 2012. It's no coincidence that output/jobs have increased so much starting in 2005.

@mgnv You're still guessing using your 🔮 crystal ball https://www.techforspace.com/european-space/
European Space Sector | Tech For Space

@spaceflight

My crystal ball says that Arianne will continue being an iconic part of the space industry 😉

@mgnv only as Amazon is as desperate to book them as they're late with their own #BlueOrigin BE-4 engines (and rocket)