• Conceptual illustration of an Orbital Transfer Vehicle.

Credit: NEC
    Conceptual illustration of an Orbital Transfer Vehicle. Credit: NEC
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NEC has launched a project to develop an Orbital Transfer Vehicle (OTV) following its selection by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the agency’s decision to award NEC with a grant for the technology development theme “Technologies for Realizing Flexible Mobility in Space: (A) Development of Inter-Orbital Transportation Vehicles.”

Through this project, NEC aims to achieve the first implementation of OTV in Asia as of 13 May 2026. 

An OTV is a spacecraft designed to transport satellites to their intended orbits, such as a geostationary or lunar orbit, after they have separated from their rockets.

Typically, after a rocket places a satellite into an initial orbit, the satellite must use its own large engines and a significant amount of fuel to reach its destination. However, by having an OTV perform this transport, even small satellites without large engines can be deployed to distant orbits.

Furthermore, since OTVs can simultaneously transport multiple small satellites to geostationary or lunar orbits, they also contribute to improved transport efficiency.

As a result, OTVs are expected to make important contributions to accelerating all aspects of space development. Not only will they promote the development of future space economies—such as the utilisation of geostationary orbits and cislunar space —but by lowering the barriers to space utilisation, they will also encourage the entry of new operators into the sector.

NEC has over half a century of experience in the development and manufacture of spacecraft, including the geostationary satellite Kizuna (Winds), the lunar orbiter Kaguya (Selene), and the deep-space probe Hayabusa2.

Moving forward, NEC plans to conduct market feasibility studies, conceptual design, and demonstrations for OTVs by the end of fiscal year 2027 to clarify the required functions and other specifications.

Following this, NEC plans to begin development of a demonstration model in fiscal year 2028, with the goal of launching it and conducting in-space demonstrations in fiscal year 2032, and aims to bring the technology to practical use in the future.

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