Daily Camera (Boulder)

Japanese aerospace firm is eyeing Broomfield

- By Lucas High

An unnamed Japanese aerospace company is considerin­g several counties in the Denver metro area, including Broomfield County, for the home of its United States headquarte­rs.

The Colorado Economic Developmen­t Commission unanimousl­y approved a $1.13-million tax incentive package Thursday in an effort to lure the firm to the state.

It is the commission’s practice not to identify companies the Colorado Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade is recruiting until incentives are accepted. That acceptance process often takes six month to a year.

The aerospace firm, called “Project Cosmic Sphere” by state economic developmen­t officials, has “developed a relationsh­ip with NASA to develop a lunar lander capable of delivering payloads to the Moon,” according to OEDIT documents.

As part of this NASA relationsh­ip, the firm must establish a foothold in the U.S. and is planning a capital investment of $40 million in the next five years.

Within the Denver metro area, “Project Cosmic Sphere” is considerin­g Broomfield, Jefferson, Denver and Douglas counties. The firm is also looking at sites in Texas and Florida.

In exchange for the tax incentives, the firm has pledged to create 48 new management, engineerin­g, finance, government affairs, sales and marketing, and research and developmen­t jobs with an average annual salary of $118,333.

While state officials won’t yet reveal the identity of “Project Cosmic Sphere,” there’s significan­t reason to think the firm could be Tokyo-based ispace Inc. Here’s why:

• ODEDIT documents show that “Project Cosmic Sphere” is involved with the developmen­t of a lunar lander capable of delivering things to the Moon. According to ispace’s website, the firm is building “small, robotic lunar landers and lunar rovers (that) are designed to provide low-cost, high-frequency transporta­tion of customer payloads to the Moon.”

• OEDIT deputy director Michelle Hadwiger said the firm is a participan­t in “a very public prize competitio­n to spur public companies to develop cost-efficient technologi­es to bring robotic spacecraft to the surface of the moon.” ispace is behind Team Hakuto, one of five finalists in Google’s $30-million Lunar XPRIZE competitio­n.

• Metro Denver Economic Developmen­t Corp. aerospace and aviation director Vicky Lea said one of the company’s missions is developing ways to “explore offworld resources — such as extracting water from the Moon — that could then be used to support living on the Moon.” By 2023, ispace’s “rovers will not simply be mobile, but they will also be equipped with tools, such as drills and manipulato­rs, to meet the various needs of surface exploratio­n and to scout potential candidates for a future manned moon base,” according to the company’s website.

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