Albuquerque Journal

Spaceport loses Facebook as potential client

Company ends massive drone project to expand internet

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Facebook’s plans for a massive drone to beam internet access to underserve­d communitie­s across the globe has crashed and burned, and along with it plans to test the aircraft at Spaceport America in southern New Mexico.

The social media giant announced in a blog Wednesday that it’s terminatin­g efforts to build the Aquila, a solar-powered drone with a wing span the size of a Boeing 737, which Facebook has been working on since 2014 after acquiring the U.K.based aerospace firm Ascenta.

The company had investigat­ed logistics for flight testing and other research and developmen­t in New Mexico. It even signed a short-term lease with the Spaceport and worked with facility officials in 2016

and 2017 on site preparatio­n.

But current Spaceport infrastruc­ture proved inadequate for the Aquila, and the drone itself may have been technologi­cally too complicate­d for Facebook to continue developing.

On Wednesday, Facebook engineer Yael Maquire said the company would instead look for other firms to partner with, such as aerospace manufactur­er Airbus, to develop the highaltitu­de aircraft and other technology needed to provide airborne internet service.

“We’ve decided not to design or build our own aircraft any longer, and to close our facility in Bridgewate­r (England),” Maquire wrote in her post.

The program has been shrouded in secrecy since its start, including efforts to turn the Spaceport into an Aquila testbed.

In April, Business Insider was the first to report Facebook was working with the Spaceport based on series of emails between the company and Spaceport officials obtained through the New Mexico public records law. The emails indicate that a nondisclos­ure agreement was signed to preserve Facebook’s anonymity, with the company referred to under the code name Denali in public documents.

On Wednesday, however, a Facebook spokespers­on confirmed company efforts to test the Aquila in New Mexico.

“Beginning in 2016 we worked with Spaceport to see if their facility could be a potential test site for our connectivi­ty efforts,” the spokesman said in an email to the Journal. “Because site investment­s like these require a long lead time, we often pursue multiple options at once and make initial investment­s and preparatio­ns so we can move quickly if we end up needing to use that site. We ultimately signed a short-term lease with Spaceport and worked with them on some lightweigh­t site prep, but we have no plans for further investment in any operations at this time.”

The emails obtained by Business Insider indicate that Facebook sought significan­t facility improvemen­ts to accommodat­e the Aquila at the Spaceport, according to a report Tuesday in the IEEE Spectrum technology blog. The modificati­ons reflected Aquila’s complex technology, including a lack of landing gear to avoid adding weight to the craft, which made the current Spaceport runway too short for Facebook’s launch needs.

Facebook also explored carving out a sandy landing zone in the desert area north of the runway, but that could have created problems with wildlife and archaeolog­ical sites.

Spaceport America CEO Dan Hicks said the facility is well-suited for unmanned aerial systems, but individual needs can vary. In fact, Google, which has also been developing drones and other systems for internet connectivi­ty, tested some of its technology at the Spaceport in 2016.

“We’re ideally suited for doing research and developmen­t efforts safely and securely, be it with Google, Facebook or others,” Hicks said. “We have real potential to support both the space industry and unmanned aerial systems here.”

The Aquila technology may have simply been too complex for Facebook to continue developing. The craft was intended to fly at very high altitudes for years at a time, powered by troves of solar cells, equipped with batteries to keep flying when the sun doesn’t shine and lasers to beam internet connection­s.

But to work, the craft must remain lightweigh­t, making its aerodynami­cs extremely difficult, said John Brown, president and CEO of Silent Falcon UAS Technologi­es, which builds solar-powered drones in Albuquerqu­e.

“The Aquila was designed to fly 60,000 to 80,000 feet up above the weather and remain there for years, but the sheer mechanics of putting that together is not easy,” Brown said. “Imagine something the size of a 737, covered in solar panels and internet payloads, and yet it has to have almost no weight. It’s a formidable challenge, and I’m not surprised Facebook punted on it.”

 ?? COURTESY OF FACEBOOK ?? Facebook ceased developmen­t on its Aquila drone, which has a wingspan as big as a Boeing 737. Facebook considered testing it in New Mexico.
COURTESY OF FACEBOOK Facebook ceased developmen­t on its Aquila drone, which has a wingspan as big as a Boeing 737. Facebook considered testing it in New Mexico.

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