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Middle spacepowers’ integration with the global supply chain for the space industry: Taiwan and Thailand

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 October 2024

Kun-Chin Lin*
Affiliation:
Professor of Military and Security Studies, Department of Spacepower (US Space Force), Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS-JHU), Washington, DC, USA
William Matthews
Affiliation:
Director of Geopolitical Research, The Adarga Research Institute, London, UK
Sam Olsen
Affiliation:
VP, The Adarga Research Institute, London, UK
*
Corresponding author: Kun-Chin Lin; Email: klin54@jh.edu
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Abstract

Space as a domain of economic and security competition between great powers has risen to become an arena of active statecraft for middle powers in the twenty-first century. It has set a high-stake stage for not only continuing struggles for catch-up industrialization of late developers but also offering opportunities to capture commercial gains of technological breakthroughs and globalization of markets. We examine these challenges for Taiwan and Thailand, surveying major trends in the emerging space industry and exploring four analytical perspectives on how government-business relations shape adaptive national industrial policies in high-technology sectors with proliferating end-users. We argue that the Asian developmental state model is evolving in response to specific challenges of a global supply chain for commercial space activities dominated by leading space firms and government regulatory actions in the United States. Significant differences in Taiwan’s and Thailand’s space and industrial policy approaches will likely create divergent technological trajectories and reinforce current constraints on improving national security. The longer-term prospect for middle spacepowers remains contingent on the space race between the United States and the People’s Republic of China.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Vinod K. Aggarwal

Introduction

Space as a domain of economic and security competition between great powers has risen to become an arena of active statecraft for middle powers in the twenty-first century. It has set a high-stake stage for not only continuing struggles for catch-up industrialization of late developers, but also offering opportunities to capture commercial gains of technological breakthroughs and globalization of markets—following the logistics revolution and trade explosion in the 1970s–1980s, and the digital economy in the 1990s–2000s. We examine these challenges for Taiwan and Thailand, surveying major trends in the emerging space industry and exploring four analytical perspectives on how government-business relations shape adaptive national industrial policies in high-technology sectors with proliferating end-users—including the government and military as the suppliers and consumers of economic statecraft. We argue that the Asian developmental state model is evolving in response to specific challenges of a global supply chain for commercial space activities dominated by leading space firms and government regulatory actions in the United States.

Motivated by the chip manufacturing success story and severely constrained by its isolated diplomatic status, Taiwanese economic planners have crafted a space manufacturing and commercialization strategy centered on a linear progression from parts manufacturing to assembly and testing of subsystems and finally to large system integration and fully domestically designed and manufactured small satellites for lower earth orbit (LEO) usages. In comparison, Thailand has enjoyed a greater leeway in exploring alternative international collaborations to develop domestic space capacity and deepen the role of the space sector in addressing wider national security challenges. We suspect that the differences in these developmental states’ approaches will likely be less impactful on the success of their space and industrial policies than their relative abilities to convince the US government and leading firms such as SpaceX that their firms can reliably overcome the regulatory transaction costs and weather the political winds to produce components on a consistently lower cost basis to support the proliferating satellite constellations that will drive the industry. Nevertheless, Taiwan’s and Thailand’s different approaches will likely create divergent technological trajectories and reinforce current constraints on improving national security.

The global space industry

The size of the global space economy, which combines satellite services and ground equipment, government space budgets, and global navigation satellite services (GNSS) equipment, is estimated at $384 billion USD in 2022.Footnote 1 The bulk of that sum goes to satellite television and services enabled by communications satellites, and around one-quarter comprises of government space budgets. Satellite manufacturing and launch systems are projected to grow from $22.9 billion in 2022 to $28.6 billion by 2030 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.8 percent, dominated by North America as the largest market and Asia-Pacific as the fastest-growing region.Footnote 2 The satellite launch systems segment—currently a little below one-third of the market size—is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period due to the rising demand for reusable launch systems to reduce overall satellite launch costs. The satellite payload market approximates $8.2 billion in 2020 and is projected to reach $17.6 billion in 2030 with a CAGR of 8.3 percent.Footnote 3 The small satellite market has taken off with CubeSats—satellites built in increments of 10 cm cubes, weighing around 1 kg instead of thousands of kgs of traditional ones, and having a three-year lifespan compared to fifteen for traditional ones.Footnote 4 CubeSats radically lowers the entry barrier to the space sector and shifts manufacturers and service providers toward a shorter-cycle business model based on newer and more technologically advanced fleets in orbit. The small satellites market was valued at $3.2 billion in 2020 and is projected to reach $13.7 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 16.4 percent.Footnote 5 Global consulting firms have high expectations for space as a booming industry, with Morgan Stanley projecting it to reach $1.1 trillion in 2040.Footnote 6

Investment in the space industry by public and private sectors has risen rapidly and with greater diversification of sources and types of capital, departing from the traditional government and military contractors-dominated capitalization model. The European Investment Bank documents the “NewSpace” phenomenon as marked by a 6.7 percent annual growth on average of the global space economy that grew between 2005 and 2017, with over 180 angel- and venture-backed space companies founded since 2000.Footnote 7 Venture capital firms represent the majority of investors in space companies, at around 46 percent of overall investments, and combined with angel investors make up around 66 percent of a total of around 400 worldwide investors in space ventures.Footnote 8 A comparable characteristic of the space industry to logistics and digital revolutions is its massive spillover effects on other sectors. See Figure 1 below. The experimental US Space Economy Satellite Account by US Bureau of Economic Analysis measures the cross-sectoral economic effects of the space economy using comparable indicators to traditional sectors. It registers the highest value-added to manufacturing, followed by information, wholesale, and government.Footnote 9 In recent years, investors and firms in these traditional sectors have become sensitized and interested in expanding into the space industry.

Figure 1. Composition of the space industry.

Source: Defense SA, “Space Industry 2016,” p. 10.

With the expansion of the space sector and diversification away from government and military applications, analysts have begun to study the global supply chain. Deloitte’s 2022 Aerospace and Defense Industry Outlook’s survey identifies supply chain disruptions (together with talent shortages) as the biggest risks or challenges for aerospace and defense (A&D) organizations in 2023, with “diversifying supplier base for critical supplies” emerging as the top priority for survey respondents of A&D companies.Footnote 10 Concrete strategies taken by these firms include moving toward local sourcing and nearshoring, building relationships with suppliers from countries with free trade agreements, and creating visibility deep into their complex and previously proliferating supply chains to better manage third-party risk.Footnote 11 Much of this corporate strategic development reflects recent government actions and anticipates further ones to come. The Biden Administration unveiled in June 2021 a sector-by-sector approach addressing critical supply chain vulnerabilities stemming from industrial policies adopted by allied and partner countries, such as Taiwan and South Korean in semiconductor manufacturing.Footnote 12 The 2022 CHIPS+ Act seeks to reduce reliance on foreign sources and increase chip research and development activities at home.Footnote 13

US and other national policymakers and corporate decision-makers coping with the dual pressures of great power competition and an increasingly global market for space capabilities will continue to develop economic statecraft supportive of internal and external balancing. Predictably, geo-economic tensions will mount as the conflicting effects of the statecraft unfold. Boosting domestic manufacturing capability, leveraging government procurement, strengthening trade rules and regulatory powers, on the one hand, and external cooperation with non-PRC manufacturers of critical goods, on the other hand, do not always fit neatly politically or strategically. In essence, there will be trade-offs between approaches of economic nationalism and selective interdependence. Things get very complicated as soon as the analyst cross-tabulates any space-asset end-user’s input needs and output markets—in other words, tracing the firm’s interests across relevant value chains. For example, the abovementioned Deloitte report goes into detail on American A&D firms’ demand for semiconductors, expansion into the back-end segment of chip production including assembling, testing, and packaging and reliance on critical minerals such as lithium for reliable and secure advanced battery technologies and nickel for aerospace superalloys.Footnote 14 Evident from this snapshot picture is a mismatch of the political discourse of the policymakers and the actual needs of firms.

Pathways to spacepower: analytical perspectives

Our exploratory case studies of the Taiwanese and Thai space industry development policies draw on the following four analytical perspectives that have applicable arguments on public-private partnership, government-business relations, and useful roles of the government in the global supply chains.

Geopolitical drivers of the space race

Conventional explanations for policy directions and capabilities of secondary spacepowers derive from the politically and technologically restrictive nature of the space sector during the Cold War—not unlike explanations for nuclear proliferation. Superpowers control allies’ accession into the “space club” based on geopolitical calculus, locking them into technologically dependent trajectories with highly limited military applications.Footnote 15 Given the high cost of acquiring space capabilities, many developing countries enter the race for benefits other than materialist and military ones—specifically, they hope for short-term status gains and long-term economic development spillover effects of space technology transfers and commercial links to American firms.Footnote 16 The geopolitical and developmental logic for investing in space continued to resonate in most contemporary studies of Asian spacepowers.Footnote 17 Sarah Hisham describes “space as a national imperative,” noting push and pull factors for Asian governments to invest, reorganize, and compete in space.Footnote 18 These factors center on a conceptual definition of the access and use of space as a matter of national security, the classification of space and supporting ground assets as critical infrastructure, and potential opportunities in the global commercial space market for domestic manufacturers and service providers.

This analytical approach focuses on the preferences and actions of the United States as the space hegemon and increasingly of its primary challenger in the PRC.Footnote 19 Broadly speaking, global opportunities for secondary powers to enter the space sector have largely derived from political, policy, and regulatory actions of the US government. In 1998, the US Congress passed a law reclassifying satellites and parts and equipment as weapons under International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR). This national security measure resulted in a proliferation of foreign manufacturers, arguably at the expense of American firms.Footnote 20 The end of the space shuttle program in 2011 resulted in a decline in the commercial space industry workforce in the United States for several years.Footnote 21 Subsequent bills since 2012 have reassessed and relaxed the export control law, but the door to globalization of space manufacturing has been kicked wide open. Paradoxically, the US government has been one of a primary beneficiary of the rapid expanding space products and services industries, accounting for some 23 percent of global spending ten years ago.Footnote 22 Since then, the US government has actively promoted private sector entrepreneurial activities, apportioning military spending to support the rise of SpaceX and Orbital Sciences as well as the expansion of traditional firms including Boeing, Northrop Grumman, and Lockheed Martin into the space business. By 2016, the US government’s share of global spending on space has declined to 14 percent.Footnote 23 Technological advances and applications rapidly reduced the price of launch and orbit through reusable rockets and the use of CubeSats, creating constellations of commercial satellites that have established the new sensing high ground for military and government uses.Footnote 24 Relatedly, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)’s and the Department of Defense (DoD)’s procurement processes have been revamped toward a contract-based, cost-controlling one, with closer interactions between the services/agency and contractor through the process and encouragement of greater private capital in space activities and competition of new space firms with traditional aerospace giants.

The commercialization momentum is concurrently restrained and spurred on in critical ways by the parallel securitization discourse and regulatory state impetus. In addition to the general trade and non-trade barrier restrictions, the US government maintains and could readily “weaponize” non-market leverages via the global reach of the Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) over aviation and launches, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in spectrum setting and satellite licensing, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) for remote-sensing licensing, export controls, etc. NASA, DoD, and other US government scientific agencies also hold the upper hand with space situation awareness data used widely by other governments.Footnote 25 At the same time, the expanding procurement mandate and budget of the US Space Force under its commercial space strategy of leveraging private sector assets, data, and analytics have generated a boon.Footnote 26

As with the internet, some analysts tend to see the “democratization” of power relations in the space domain following commercialization and globalization.Footnote 27 This view is premature and likely misleading.Footnote 28 The membership expansion of the “space club” does not lead to equality between states and public-private spheres.Footnote 29 Of the fifty or so spacefaring nations, only about nine nations have a national space budget over $1 billion as of 2016, with the rest divided evenly at the $100 million mark.Footnote 30 From a security perspective, moving away from a Cold War-era dominance of superpowers has created “a more complex, multi-stakeholder environment that has implications for deterrence and management of the risks associated with accidental escalation or purposeful conflict.”Footnote 31 Most secondary spacefaring countries remain relatively helpless in face of the militarization and weaponization of space.Footnote 32 In a “space war,” any space debris or incapacitated satellites will immediately affect all. In scenarios of a disastrous asteroid collision or massive climate change impact, secondary spacepowers could only rely on US and possibly Russian and Chinese capabilities. The increasing dependence of many systems on Earth—including finance, logistics, and manufacturing—on space services such as Earth observation (EO), satellite communications, and positioning, navigation, and timing creates differential “sensitivity” and “vulnerability” effects on countries.Footnote 33 It is not clear which countries are more at risk, and our case studies help to explore these effects.

The developmental state 2.0 in space

The developmental state concept in comparative politics and political economy literature continues to inform analysis of great and secondary power relations in twenty-first-century technological competition.Footnote 34 Taking stock of the mixed record of government interventions and significant structural changes in the global economy since the 1990s, recent studies have developed conditional and nuanced arguments on state actions that could support domestic economic opportunities in a sector-specific setting. A 2022 Council for Foreign Relations report notes a return of the US industrial policy, prompted by economic and national security concerns, which could represent sector-specific (e.g., semiconductors) departures from a general decline in government funding for R&D and manufacturing’s share of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) for advanced industrial countries since the 1970s.Footnote 35 Hauge (Reference Hauge2020) critically assesses leading claims of global value chain (GVC) theories that the rapid expansion of GVC has rendered import-substitution industrialization and export-oriented industrialization policies obsolete, as it has become pointless to build a self-sufficient domestic supply chain and integrate an entire industry in order to produce a complete final product.Footnote 36 Instead, GVC theories claim that the role of the state should now focus on linking up with multinational corporations, identifying niche products for domestic production for GVC, aligning domestic politics and governance institutions to facilitate the technology transfer, etc.Footnote 37 Haugh offers a useful corrective in pointing out that Taiwan and South Korea in fact had “GVC-oriented industrial policies” in the 1960s–1980s. What remain constant for secondary powers in shaping effective industrial policies, in face of shifting global market and technological frontiers, are their relationship with great power patrons, state autonomy (broadly defined), policy-crafted leverages over foreign firms and investors, and influence over emerging global rules, standards. and practices.

For the space industry, Weinzierl (Reference Weinzierl2019) argues that the role of government in the market economies framework has three components: (1) establishing the market through decentralization of decision-making and financing for human space activities, (2) refining the market through policies that address market failures and ensure a healthy market structure, and (3) tempering the market through regulation in pursuit of social objectives. Robinson and Mazzucato (Reference Robinson and Mazzucato2019) track the evolution of “mission-oriented policies” toward a “market creation policy” in the US and European space sector. The earlier missions of the NASA and European Space Agency (ESA) focused on clear challenges with identifiable concrete problems, directed by a strong centralized agency. In contrast, today these agencies address broadly defined grand challenges with decentralized innovation systems with mixed top-down and bottom-up problem definitions. The European Space Policy Institute (2021) analyzes “emerging space nations” by their “capacity” to achieve the full spectrum of space activities and integrate them into national infrastructure, policy, and strategies and by “autonomy” in policy and technology.Footnote 38 The milestones of these nations include

  • Political commitments, mainly the adoption of a space policy/strategy, often in conjunction with a legal regime for space activities;

  • Investment in governance institution and financial support, including the creation of a national institution specifically in charge of space activities (e.g., space agency), a dedicated budget for the national space program, and participation in international programs and/or space diplomacy;

  • Provision of a space industrial policy and associated infrastructure, including the acquisition of space capabilities from third countries for national purposes, mobilization of domestic industrial means for the development and/or operation of space systems, and configuration of systems and/or facilities for access to space (e.g., spaceport, launch system).

We will examine these components in the context of Taiwan and Thailand in the following sections.

American early-mover advantages in space markets

Schumpeterian creative destruction and oligopolistic market formation dominate narratives of structural challenges facing spacefaring nations.Footnote 39 “Space barons” (Davenport Reference Davenport2018) such as Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos bask in the limelight of public imagination and political commentaries, often masking much technological continuity from earlier military-industrial complex outputs and a more gradual movement toward a “normalized” balance of public-private investment in the space industry.Footnote 40 Barbaroux (Reference Barbaroux2016) describes the decreasing “asymmetry between government [e.g., space agencies and military organizations] and non-government customers [e.g., universities, research laboratories and private companies]” before reaching a more stable balance.Footnote 41 Undoubtedly, this shift is not homogeneous among space nations. Barbaroux places the EU on one end of the “normal” and the PRC on the other end of a “centralized” model of the space industry.Footnote 42

Asian space nations including Japan as the clear leader face the hard reality of the market dominance of Western firms. A general corporate strategy for addressing these concerns would include three elements: (1) securing contracts as a key supplier to SpaceX dominance, (2) expanding overseas business as individual Asian space markets and government contracts (aside from China) are too limited to sustain growth, and (3) developing core competence (and brand) from an original equipment manufacturing (OEM) or original design manufacturing (ODM) basis toward manufacturing and integration of subsystems and eventually the whole satellite. For example, Space BD Japan actively courts contracts from Taiwan, Australia, and Myanmar in placing their satellites in the International Space Station (ISS) for release.

Finding a niche in the global space industry supply chain is time-sensitive. With space businesses competing across borders, a winner-take-all dynamic is emerging in launch services and other segments—in 2023, SpaceX performed 98 launches—mostly for its Starlink satellites—out of a total of 223 globally, with no other company even coming close. As the industry is populated by specialized, young small and midsize enterprises (SMEs), and dependent on government procurement and venture or angel capital at the start, it has been particularly susceptible to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) disruptions to the supply chain. Industry concentration could be the most likely sectoral response to economic shocks, with debatable implications for the process of creative destruction over the long run. The flip side of the same coin of oligopolistic dominance is the oversized and prolonged role of the government in supporting domestic firms.Footnote 43 Similarly for interstate commercial relations, in EU-Japan space cooperation, “inter-agency [ESA-JAXA] relations feed almost 72% of the cooperation between Europe and Japan, 22% comes from inter-university activities, followed by 5.9% of industry-to-industry trade and the rest from hybrid relations.”Footnote 44

Global and regional supply chain analysis

As suggested by GVC and new industrial policy literature, governments could play a role in inserting domestic firms into supply chains dominated by non-national firms and governments.Footnote 45 The Asian Development Bank notes that the expansion of global supply chains slowed in 2010–2019 and may be shortening since 2020 due to geopolitical and pandemic factors. As a result, developing countries that had hoped to capture a niche in transnational supply chains—and thus engage in the benefits of indirect exports, as well as the non-trade, value transfer benefits of the intellectual properties of contracting MNCs—would need to reassess their policies and approaches.Footnote 46 Intellectual property (IP) and trade in intangibles are particularly important for space industries, with many “factoryless” manufacturers organize their supply chains based on IP as their prime asset. This compounds the impact of geopolitical risk factors.Footnote 47 Smaller firms and nations are more vulnerable to multiple “chokepoints” and asymmetric impact of shock. This logic appears in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s analysis of global value chains in the space sector.Footnote 48 While scientific activities and supply chains have been spread out more widely, and buyers of satellites seem to enjoy more choices in suppliers, it is far from a buyers’ market. Subsystems are still dominated by American, European, and Japanese component, and electrical, electronic, and electromechanical parts come from very specialized firms, with existing niches reinforced by regulatory requirements for “space qualification.”Footnote 49

Compared with the developmental state approach above, GVC analysis shows that government support presents a dual-edged sword—it may create firms that cannot survive without “rent” or help start-ups get through hard times. The cross-border and ripple effects of government actions are unpredictable. Examining recent Japan-ROK disputes over critical materials, Haggard and Kim (Reference Haggard and Kim2020) noted that “reputatively small administrative changes have highly disruptive effects on the industries in question”—in their case, the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry mandated review of imported South Korean fluorinated polyimide, photoresist, hydrogen fluoride, and related technologies. They conclude that both governments learned that protectionist policies could backfire.Footnote 50 Once manufacturing capabilities have largely exited, with the corresponding loss of a niche in the GVC, it is very difficult to bring them back. Kamakura (Reference Kamakura2022) reasons that “globalised semiconductor industry is unlikely to reshore to Japan even amid supply chain disruptions due to the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic… [because it has become] embedded in Asian production networks and need to be optimised within a regionalised production system.”Footnote 51 The main prohibitive factor seems to be the scale of public resources needed to subsidize a large-scale semiconductor production base in a limited domestic market, with atrophied firms and changing user companies, while facing other Asian government’s subsidies for their producers with current comparative advantages along the regional production network.

Taiwan: a state-led pathway to system integration

In our fieldwork in Taiwan in July–August 2022, we were constantly reminded of the Hsinchu Industrial Park as the ecosystem and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) as the corporate entity epitomizing the successful industrial policy of the last generation of Taiwanese economic planners.Footnote 52 In fact, one might imagine an ideal means to achieve national interest and space commercial success in one go would be a Taiwanese—owned and located in situ—space manufacturing firm that is as critical and irreplaceable to the national and economic security of all major powers as TSMC has been in recent years. But is it a pipedream or a useful reference point?

The story of formative semiconductor industry development in Taiwan in the 1980s–1990s need not be repeated here, except to underscore in the GVC literature the prerequisite of establishing a national innovation system that captures contributing actors and institutions—including corporate laboratories, public research institutes, R&D contract firms, and universities—in a relationship of “reciprocal causation,” in which “the growing sophistication of the product itself causes process innovation. Process innovation in turn may enable or require further innovation in products, leading to an increasingly tighter linkage between product change and process change.”Footnote 53 This dynamic feedback between products and manufacturing processes is arguably the Achille’s heel of the Chinese “techno-security” (Cheung and Fukushima Reference Cheung, Fukushima, Saadia and Blount2023) state’s yet unrealized striving to become a leader in advanced chip manufacturing. Taiwan’s national space strategy and industrial policy can be characterized as “developmental” (see above section) in both the primary objective of upgrading the national economy and the policy approach of leveraging a state-led corporatist approach to resource mobilization. However, the specific conditions of the global supply chains for the space industry demand different means of identifying Taiwanese firms for state support, engaging foreign contractors, and finding a defensible niche against competing secondary spacepowers and supporting industrial upgrading over time.Footnote 54

Taiwan’s space policy and agency development Footnote 55

Taiwan is currently in phase 3 of a three-phase plan outlined in 1991 by the precursor of National Space Organization (NSPO).Footnote 56 The first phase, 1991–2006, relied almost exclusively on foreign technology and components for satellites assembled abroad and launched abroad but carrying Taiwanese payload with remote-sensing and atmospheric scientific experiments. The second phase, 2004–2018, was marked by significant technological transfers and absorption managed by the NSPO, with scientific inputs from several Taiwanese universities (discussed in the following section) and funding from dedicated central budgets for setting up core systems geared toward producing high-resolution remote-sensing satellites and ionosphere sounding rockets. The overall—and consistent to date—strategic approach derives from the National Applied Research Laboratories (NARLabs) mission statement and focuses on (1) human resource development, (2) continuing advancement toward the technological frontier, and (3) commercialization and promotion of the domestic space industry.Footnote 57

The first two phases saw the completion of Formosat-1, Formosat-2, Formosat-3, and Formosat-5 projects that launched nine CubeSats, ten geosynchronous orbiting trials, and 4 rocket launch experiments.Footnote 58 Mostly carrying out missions of remote sensing and meteorological forecasting. Significant domestic content was introduced in Formosat-5, which received input from fifty Taiwanese firms and scientific institutes.Footnote 59 Predictably, numerous long-range plan objectives and timelines were revised due to political and technological constraints. For example, the Formosat-6 project—slated to be launched with Taiwan’s self-made carrier rocket in 2008—quietly dropped off official documentation.Footnote 60 The official program focused on satellite R&D and sounding rocket projects, while launch vehicle activities went underground.Footnote 61 Heavily dependent on US university and agency collaboration in forms of technology transfers, satellite production and launch, and even finance, the Formosat-7 (named COSMIC-2 in the United States) constellation’s launch was delayed by two years until 2019 due to US financial considerations.Footnote 62

The current phase (2019–2028), formulated between 2015 and 2017 and approved by the Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) and Executive Yuan in 2018, has received significant funding of over USD 900 million over ten years and staunch political support from President Tsai Ing-wen. In 2020, Tsai incorporated the space industry as one of the Six Core Strategic Industries in the national industrial policy plan.Footnote 63 In January 2023, NSPO was upgraded administratively into a directly affiliated corporation under MOST and renamed the Taiwan Space Agency (TASA).Footnote 64 Prior to the upgrade, NSPO was nested under the NARLabs which constitutes an independent nonprofit institute under the guidance of MOST. Now TASA and NARLabs are administratively equals, although NARLabs is likely to continue to provide scientific and technical assistance to TASA.Footnote 65 The organizational mandate of NSPO has expanded from conducting fundamental research to “guiding business activity in the space sector in ways that align with national economic development plans.Footnote 66 As other ministries and agencies gained a stake in the use of space assets, along with NSPO, they became embedded in a “corporatist” framework of planning authority, consultation process, and patronage of university spin-off enterprises and private initiatives.Footnote 67

In May 2021, the Legislative Yuan passed the Space Development Act, which declared a peaceful goal and global commercial orientation for Taiwan’s space development.Footnote 68 A domestic launch center was put forward on the plan, taking advantage of Taiwan’s proximity to the equator and surrounding by seas.Footnote 69 In July and November 2022, Taiwan conducted test flights of a two-stage hybrid-propellent rocket with guidance and control technology, launched from a site in Pingtung County. National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University and National Chen-Kung University were involved in building the “scientific research” rocket and payload including a domestic-made cosmic ray detector.Footnote 70

The deliverable of the third phase is one satellite per year, building three satellite constellations and ten satellites.Footnote 71 The first flagship project of the third phase was the launch of “Triton,” Taiwan’s first locally built weather satellite, on 9 October 2023.Footnote 72 One of its functions is to cooperate with Formosat-7 to collect information about speed and other characteristics of winds near the ocean. NSPO officials have declared that 82 percent of the weather satellite’s parts and components are locally designed and manufactured, 5 percent over the 78 percent of Formosat-5 and Formosat-7. The launch vehicle was a Vega-C rocket developed by France’s Arianespace SA at the Guiana Space Centre in French Guiana.Footnote 73 The parallel Formosat-8 LEO constellation project would launch six remote-sensing satellites with Taiwanese components of image sensors, cameras, insulation materials, etc.Footnote 74 What remains less specific, and possibly in the works and involving repackaging of different initiatives, is the “Beyond 5G” plan to develop Taiwan’s first LEO communications satellite—comparable in specifications to those of the Starlink satellites—scheduled for launch in 2025.Footnote 75 NSPO officials identify the lower earth orbit as the most attractive growth segment for which Taiwan already has more than thirty ground segment equipment and satellite manufacturers that have the potential to become important suppliers in the LEO satellite industry.Footnote 76 There will be a corresponding shift in the type and functions of satellites from scientific research and remote-sensing toward communications links space assets to IoT applications and space-enabled services.Footnote 77

Domestic private sector players

The long-range development plan by NSPO provides an environmental assessment for the promotion of new space firms and global commercialization of existing space-related firms. Recognizing several bottlenecks for Taiwan’s space manufacturing growth—including the small domestic consumer base, unspecialized workforce, and limited and unstable funding pool—NSPO has decided to bet on the rapid growth of SpaceX and similar type satellite constellations that depend on constantly renewing of small satellites and lowering costs of usable launch vehicles.Footnote 78 The key to compete in the constellation business is to mass produce components that are reliability and low cost, not necessarily requiring high or specialized specifications (e.g., there are very few uses for 2–3 nm chips in space applications). It follows that the market challenge of this sector is that the products substitution (e.g., from ROK and India) is expected to be fierce once these countries’ industrial policies get rolling.Footnote 79

According to this market developmental logic, NSPO would first help domestic firms to secure OEM contracts with tier-one or tier-two MNCs such as SpaceX and OneWeb for supplying satellite components and ground equipment and then support technology transfer and development to establish ODM companies and domestic subsystem manufacturing capabilities. The strong firms emerging from these early stages would then gain government support to become “system integrators” that are crucial partners to the big space firms like SpaceX, paving the way for their eventual maturity to be able to produce complete satellites!Footnote 80 A critic would point out that inserting a few domestic firms into the global supply chain and helping them seek out potentially interested firms for their products would not likely produce a sum that is more than the parts. As a research unit in its DNA, NSPO has yet to demonstrate a confidence-inspiring record in marketing and selecting winners and losers for government support. The range of extant domestic firms contributing to the space supply chains include firms in ntegrated circuit, radio-frequency services, precision instruments, and ground equipment, including TSMC, Foxconn, Microelectronics Technology Inc., Microelectronics Technology Inc., Kinpo Electronics, Gongin Precision Ind. Co. Ltd., Chicony Power Technology Co., Elite Material Co. Ltd., Compeq Manufacturing Co. Ltd., Shenmao Technology Inc., Chung Yang, Lung Hwa Electronics, Hua Xiang, and Jonsa. Alongside these established firms are new, space-specific companies including TiSpace (launch services), Odysseus Space (launch and a range of space mission services, recently moved headquarters to Luxemburg for ESA contracts), LiscoTech (image sensing, onboard computing, artificial intelligence analysis), Jinduen (testing), WavePro (RF testing), Alpha Networks (network equipment supplier to D-Link), Tensor Tech (satellite Attitude Determination and Control System for CubeSats), Taurus (space heritage certification), and HelioX Cosmos (a niche role in linking Taiwanese payload needs to Japanese Space BD).Footnote 81 Space strategic consultancy firms such as Infinio Capital play an intermediating role between the government and private sectors, and domestic and US venture capital funds.Footnote 82

NSPO is keen to support Taiwanese space firms by establishing their “flight heritage” via incorporation into the Formosat-8 project, which would enable them to sell components to the global market.Footnote 83 Director General Wu of NSPO made it clear that “Taiwan’s space industry is centered around the ground segment of the GNSS, which makes use of components such as antennas, communication modules, power supplies, and wires. However, as satellite technology matures, upgrading original manufacturing specifications and ensuring passage through product testing and verification will be essential. Since 2019, the NSPO has been gathering resources to create the most comprehensive verification site in Taiwan.”Footnote 84 The underlying logic of this function is that US regulators are not sufficiently accessible, the overlayered jurisdictions are daunting to Taiwanese firms, and the time and resources for certification in the United States would be prohibitive for any SME. Taiwanese OEM firms typically work on short cycles (3–5 years), preferring to leave certification to clients. However, this business model stunts sustained industrial and product development. Furthermore, Western firms would approach prospective Taiwanese suppliers under the assumption that volume is the magic word, and thus one of their bargaining strategies is aggregating various clients’ needs into one order with general specifications for the clients’ needs.Footnote 85 The value-added of more customized designs would be lost in the process for the Taiwanese. Helping domestic SMEs clear the certification hurdle would enhance the firms’ bargaining position and capture the market more effectively. Ultimately, without having at least a handful of leading firms with proprietary core technologies, it would be hard for the Taiwanese space industry to independently develop certification and standards. Furthermore, even as Taiwan starts to develop its certification, other states—most notably—Japan will be seeking to corner that market with major state investment and leveraging its close political relationship and regulatory familiarity with the United States. The Japanese vision is to establish a regional hub for certification, to which Asian and other regions’ space firms would gravitate.

Lastly, NSPO attempts to overcome information asymmetry in the domestic space sector. In 2017—upon the launch of Taiwan’s first self-made hi-res optical remote-sensing satellite—NSPO conducted an industry survey as part of the in-house analysis that proposed a space development model for the third phase.Footnote 86 NSPO also provides information and organizes Taiwanese firms in attending aerospace-related trade shows in the United States such as the annual Satellite Fair in Washington, DC. In the twenty-first century, Taiwanese planners appear unlikely to instate the kind of performance targets to discipline firms receiving state protection and support. Given the nature of the emergent space market and rapidly evolving technologies, the Taiwanese government has shown restraint in giving domestic firms “a runway to make mistakes and learn from them… [which would be] good for Taiwan’s long-term position in the new space value chain.”Footnote 87

The Taiwanese sovereign wealth fund—the National Development Fund (NDF)—serves as a major platform for promoting industrial investment policies in Taiwan, selecting winners and losers through market intelligence and financial incentives.Footnote 88 Focusing on emerging and strategic industries, as well as the venture capital industry, NDF’s portfolio included sixty-six companies for a total capital of NT$64.489 billion, and sixty venture capital investment companies for a total capital of NT$22.449 billion by the end of 2021.Footnote 89 This list included three aerospace, five optoelectronics, and five semiconductor companies (including TSMC), as well as venture capital companies with aerospace and space-enabled service portfolios. NDF’s “Business Angel Investment Program” bets on several start-ups in information and communication application services—key end-users of space assets.Footnote 90

Our interviews with NDF and NSPO officials uncovered a persistent theme—the government can reach out with business opportunities and foreign contacts, but individual firms may not respond. In fact, many established Taiwanese firms with existing core competence and businesses relevant to space manufacturing are skeptical of taking up the invitation. Interviewees offer two reasons: First, the OEM corporate culture—Taiwanese firms typically are persuaded by sizable order contracts, but producing components for foreign space firms often does not amount to significant profitability in the short run. Paradoxically, the larger the OEM supplier, the smaller the share of the space business would be for its overall revenue and the weaker interest in expanding the subcontracting relations.Footnote 91 Second, the Taiwanese government did not make a strong case for working with foreign firms including SpaceX seeking suppliers in Taiwan five years ago, as the planners themselves were unclear of the growth potential of the space industry and the publicly aired ambitions of SpaceX.Footnote 92 In recent couple of years, Taiwanese firms are beginning to come around—some twenty firms are currently supplying SpaceX—although it may be difficult to differentiate motivations of rent-seeking opportunities in the escalating government investment in space from a more mature and positive assessment of the global space industry.Footnote 93 The “social capital” between established and new firms in this emerging sector remains thin, slowing the government’s attempts at coordinated and collective action and rapid dissemination of business opportunities and overseas contacts.Footnote 94

The expanding knowledge-transfer ecosystem

Taiwan’s R&D as % of GDP steadily rose from 2.96 percent in 2012 to 3.35 percent in 2018, on par with Sweden (3.32%) and Japan (3.28%), exceeding the US (2.83) and OECD (2.38) average but less than that of ROK (4.53%).Footnote 95 The MOST leads in receiving government S&T resources at around 47.7 billion in 2019, followed by the Ministry of Economic Affairs—all other departments/agencies trail far behind.Footnote 96 MOST actively supports the following government-affiliated universities and institutes:

  • National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology (NCSIST) has its origin as Taiwan’s military R&D and systems integration center. NCSIST fulfills a function comparable to the American Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), but they also assume mixed roles in competing for and awarding research and development, integration, and manufacturing contracts. Along with the Aerospace Industrial Development Corporation, NCSIST it is considered to be one of the two Taiwanese prime defense contractors, ranking 60th in Stockholm International Peace Research Institute’s list of 100 largest arms manufacturers in the world in 2022.Footnote 97

  • National Central University’s Department of Atmospheric Sciences and the Institute of Space Sciences have been Taiwan’s primary scientific knowledge base for ionospheric physics and space physics since the 1950s.Footnote 98 One of the department’s faculty is Professor Loren Chang, who led the INSPIREsat-1 project, launched from India’s Satish Dhawan Space Center on 24 February 2022. The satellite was engineered under the International Satellite Program in Research and Education (INSPIRE), whose membership includes a consortium of colleges and universities with space science programs. Taiwanese, Indian, US, and Singaporean universities were involved, with NCU designing the Compact Ionospheric Probe measuring ionosphere dynamics and the US Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (U of Colorado Boulder) designing the solar spectrometer measuring the sun’s coronal heating process.Footnote 99

  • Other universities have departments with research capabilities, but not yet with proven project management records. For example, National Cheng Kung University (NCKU) is strong in electrical engineering and was an early designer of CubeSat, National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University has rocket specialization, Tamkang University has Taiwan’s first aerospace engineering department, and Taiwan’s top private university, Feng Chia University, houses a Geographic Information System (GIS) Research Center.Footnote 100 With the latest central government funding pull, National Taiwan University along with the other top university with strong physics and related departments has lined up to bid for space projects. Together with NCKU, the Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the Academia Sinica had a five-year research Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with JAXA from 2014—the first formal space research exploration agreement between Taiwan and another spacepower—to design and manufacture a high-resolution space observation instrument in Japan’s Arase satellite.Footnote 101

  • There are several MOST-sponsored institutes providing satellite components and space payload, for example, the National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center, which in 2021 prepared a batch of virus-like particles for crystallization experiments on the ISS. This experiment was done in collaboration with Japanese company Space BD, appointed as the sole private partner by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and coordinated by HelioX Cosmos—a Taiwanese space services start-up.Footnote 102 Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) develops communications and ground terminals for launches and its R&D and international partnerships aim to bring down the cost for SMEs.Footnote 103

Interestingly, and perhaps in contrast to the government’s overture to private firms described above, research institutes—aside from the military-funded NCSIST—appeal for government support through traditional project funding mechanisms. NSPO also serves as a lobbying hub for the epistemic community. However, the government does not always recognize the merit and importance of the academic proposals. The multinational cooperation behind INSPIREsat-1 was not initiated by intergovernmental actors but by an international academic network used by Professor Loren Chang at NCU, who first contacted his fellow graduate student friends in Colorado and Singapore to talk shop on CubeSats.Footnote 104 No doubt the Taiwanese government had to clear international agreements for cooperation, and it showed a strong interest in the political benefits of such cooperation, but it is a story of transnational talent flows and social capital effects. Projecting these dynamics on a large scale would begin to approximate the critical linkages between Silicon Valley and the Hsinchu Industrial Park in propelling Taiwan’s semiconductor industry. An industrial policy historian might recall that TSMC was created as Morris Chang’s spin-off company while he was working for ITRI, which is a government-run technology R&D institute similar to NARLabs—both were under the National Science Council (NSC) that was reorganized into MOST in 2014.

Government priorities also constrain bottom-up university initiatives in tangible ways. Anecdotes point to NSPO relegating opportunities for cislunar payload opportunities proposed by NCU and negotiated by HelioX Cosmos with Japan’s Space BD and SpaceX—possibly in consideration of NSPO’s ongoing plans with NASA.Footnote 105 TiSpace’s launch sites in Taitung County were deemed illegal by the county government, leading to fines and cutting off of electricity. It turned out that MOST had set its mind on a Pingtung site near a military base and NCSIST, which has been used to test missiles.Footnote 106 As NSPO pushes for indigenization of technology and production in Formosat-8 and other satellite projects, it has set quantitative targets for local content and capabilities (e.g., thrusters, inter-sat links) that may or may not be market rational for domestic firms to develop in the short run.Footnote 107

Strong linkages with US government and firms

Throughout the progression of the three phases of Taiwan’s space policy, Taiwanese planners have actively contracted foreign firms to secure technology and knowledge transfer in order to develop local expertise. For the Formosat projects up to Formosat-7, the Taiwanese depended on foreign firms including SpaceTech GmbH (Immenstaad, Germany), Ball Corporation (United Kingdom), Surrey Satellite Technology (United Kingdom), COM (Canada), RedEye (United States), etc. Above all, since 1994, Formosat programs have been “joint constellation meteorological satellite mission” by the Taiwanese and US government agencies including the NOAA as NSPO’s primary partner, the US Space Force’s Space Systems Command (SSC) and its Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and laboratories at Utah State University and University of Colorado Boulder.Footnote 108 In February 2022, American Institute in Taiwan signed an MoU for US-Taiwan cooperate in the Formosat-7 project (goes by the name of COSMIC-2 in the United States), again with NSPO-NOAA partnership as the basis of co-production governance.Footnote 109 Despite the much-heralded Taiwanese input, the outer casing of Formosat-7 was made by SSTL, and the internal payload had to meet US-NOAA and DoD requirements, as it was the COSMOS-2 project launched from the United States.Footnote 110

What remains undocumented is the influence of American preferences on Taiwan’s space development. There are signs of a strong influence. Gillet (Reference Gillet2021) suggests:

Taiwan has been reluctant to develop launch capabilities due to the dual use of the required technology, rocket technology being easily transformable into ballistic missiles or other military technology. It is suspected that the United States themselves, primary military ally of the island, have pushed Taiwan to refrain from developing such capability on the grounds that it could potentially give China a reason for intensifying military actions around the island.

Jaffe (Reference Jaffe2021) argues that Taiwan has benefitted from access to solid-state fuel for its rockets, which ROK did not until the past few years due to US concerns that it could be used to launch nuclear weapons. On the other hand, the United States has suppressed Taiwan’s launch programs for fear that it could justify an aggressive, escalatory response from Beijing. Instead, Taiwan has largely relied on SpaceX and launch sites in California (including Vandenberg Air Force Base).Footnote 111 One could look closer at US trade restrictions and firms’ timing and priorities in disclosing component specifications for OEM suppliers Taiwan to gauge US government’s level of trust in Taiwan.

Publicly, Taiwanese officials concurrently offer an optimistic image of Taiwanese firms’ prospects in supplying the dominant space firms and envision achieving self-sufficiency in satellite manufacturing. Tsai Tung-hung of NSPO stated in a 2021 panel discussion that “Taiwan is a key supplier for SpaceX, and it has the potential to make systems of its own, to cement its position in the global supply chain.”Footnote 112 Another official boasted that “SpaceX’s satellite project wouldn’t be possible without Taiwan. Peek inside their satellites, and you’ll find plenty of parts made by Taiwanese firms.”Footnote 113 Aside from probable American reservations for a domestic launch site in Taiwan, National Cheng Kung University’s participation in the Belgian government-sponsored QB50 mission of a CubeSat constellation exposed the cost and paperwork requirements of a foreign launch platform—unpredictable problems that exceeded the NCKU’s resources.Footnote 114 Critics have pointed out that the government’s plan to push firms to advance from OEM to self-sufficiency may turn out to be a failed strategy if the end goal is a finished satellite that can compete in the global market. Bill Chang of HelioX Cosmos offered a cautionary note to NSPO officials who seem gung-ho about Taiwan’s economic opportunities in LEO—mainly riding on the back of SpaceX launches and proliferating telecommunications and remote-sensing applications. He argues that LEO is a saturated market and Taiwan should look elsewhere to establish a niche, including the cislunar orbits.Footnote 115 However, the process of striving for that goal could drive Taiwanese firms to acquire a supply chain presence, technological proficiency, and network capital to move the domestic space industry forward into new niches.

The silent partner: Taiwan’s military

Our preliminary research to date has not identified a clear space policy position, expression of strategic interest and operational requirements in the space domain, or specific deployment of space assets by the Ministry of Defense.Footnote 116 On one hand, this sounds somewhat unbelievable given the escalating security threats from China and intensifying preparation for the cross-Taiwan Strait conflict with the People’s Liberation Army. Nominally, no Formosat satellite has been used for military purposes such as surveillance. On the other hand, official statements often imply dual usage. The Triton, with its GNSS functions, is clearly capable of Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) functions with US military links.Footnote 117 For in discussing the Beyond 5G plan, NSPO officials have pointed out that Taiwan’s external internet access runs through submarine cables. A LEO constellation will circumvent that obvious vulnerability. Knowledgeable analysts have begun to suggest the use of space assets for defense. Wang and Matossian (Reference Wang and Matossian2021) propose that homegrown satellite optical, synthetic aperture radar capabilities can give Taiwan an edge in asymmetric warfare. The Taiwanese military forces’ in-house think-tank, the Institute for National Defense and Security Research (INDSR), has held events and produced environmental analyses that advocate updating military strategy and procurement to make use of space resources.Footnote 118 As the Taiwanese military remains dependent on the US military, the use of space assets would become a salient issue area of inter-military dialogue and acquisition negotiations.Footnote 119

Thailand: hedging strategies for space

Thailand launched its first satellite, Thaicom 1, in 1993, from the Kourou site in French Guiana. Footnote 120 Since then, the country has developed further satellite programs, the Thailand Earth Observation System (THEOS) and Napa, geared toward earth observation for purposes such as environmental monitoring and disaster relief, and in the past few years has developed an ambitious space program backed by dedicated legislation and institutions, and developing a greater focus on defense. Thailand’s capacity to continue to develop its space ambitions hinge on international supply chains and collaboration with a range of external partners.

Developing countries increasingly tend to adopt strategies of collaboration that “go outside the traditional North-South arrangements” in order to avoid the dependencies associated with past cooperation with either the United States or the Soviet Union. Footnote 121 This is notably true of Thailand, whose space strategy should be understood in the context of the country’s efforts to navigate a path between the United States and the growing influence of the People’s Republic of China. However, these are not the only external actors involved, and Thailand’s space program has traditionally involved collaboration with European firms as well.

Since the launch of Thaicom 1, Thailand’s trajectory as a spacepower has shifted from a position of total reliance on foreign technology to an indigenous development program that continues to rely on contractors from abroad. As Thailand’s domestic expertise and capabilities in space have increased, so have its ambitions for the role played by the space sector in wider questions of national security. Increasing capabilities and ambitions have also led to the development of international collaborative ties going beyond the development of satellites themselves. The growing importance of space to Thailand’s national security priorities has geopolitical ramifications, the most significant of which is how the country balances its long-standing relationship with the United States as a treaty ally with the growing influence of the PRC.

The development of Thailand’s satellite program: Thaicom and THEOS

The early stages of Thailand’s satellite program were marked by a reliance on US, French, and German technology. Thailand’s initial satellites, Thaicom 1 and Thaicom 2, relied on collaboration with US and European firms; both were launched from Kourou in French Guiana and used US firm Hughes Space and Communications Company’s HS-376 satellite, French firm Arianespace’s Ariane-44L H10+ rockets, Footnote 122 and further components from Aerospatiale (France), Contraves (Germany), and DASA (Germany) which then merged with Astrium (France). Footnote 123 Thaicom 4 (IPSTAR) was US-built and the world’s first high-throughput satellite, providing broadband Internet across a large area of Asia-Pacific.

In 2004, Thailand launched its own satellite development program, marking an important milestone in the development of its space capabilities. The THEOS, an LEO satellite, was developed by Thailand’s Geo-Informatics and Space Technology Development Agency (GISTDA), under the Ministry of Science and Technology, in collaboration with France-based EADS Astrium SAS as the primary contractor. Footnote 124 The primary purpose of THEOS has been environmental monitoring and natural resource management, but it has also been used to map territories disputed with neighboring Cambodia. Footnote 125 THEOS-2 was approved in 2017, to be manufactured by Airbus; meanwhile, Thailand has also developed CubeSats including KNACSAT, a university research satellite, and JAISAT-1, for amateur radio. Footnote 126 THEOS-2 was launched in October 2023,Footnote 127 following an initial delay due to a technical error caused by electrical overload, which also delayed the launch of Taiwan’s Triton (Formosat-7R) weather satellite and ten European Space Agency satellites using the same rocket.Footnote 128

Space strategy and national security: building an institutional and legal framework

Under the Prayut government, satellite development and space strategy more generally became increasingly linked to national security concerns and Thailand’s long-term economic strategy. The government did not hold back in stating its ambitions and linking space directly to Thailand’s continued development, economic prosperity, and international standing; in December 2020, Anek Laothamatas, Minister of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation, announced plans to launch a spacecraft into lunar orbit within seven years (which would make it only the fifth Asian nation to do so) and thus demonstrate to a domestic audience that Thailand is no longer a developing country but one with a bright future. Footnote 129

This fits into a broader strategy for 2020–2037 laid out by Thailand’s National Space Policy Committee in 2017, which called for GISTDA to draft a National Space Act that would establish a National Space Agency responsible for coordinating all Thailand’s space activity other than that covered by the military or other agencies, Footnote 130 from the funding of research and manufacturing of satellites to areas as diverse as space tourism and space mining. Footnote 131 The Draft Act has yet to be passed into law but was approved by the Thai cabinet in July 2021; its core focus is the development of a space economy. According to a 2021 GISTDA report, over 35,600 enterprises operate space-related businesses in Thailand, generating around 56.122 billion baht. Footnote 132

In addition to integrating space into its economic strategy, the Prayut government also emphasized the importance of space to national security, responsibility for which falls to the Royal Thai Air Force (RTAF). Footnote 133 The military importance of the space sector was concretized with the RTAF’s establishment of a dedicated space operations center in 2019 as part of its 20-year strategic plan. Footnote 134 The purpose of the center is to “enhance national security in space and protect the country against future threats.” Footnote 135 The RTAF’s 2020 White Paper is notable for its emphasis on space capabilities, predicting a “substantial increase” in application in future military operations. Footnote 136 It remains to be seen whether Thailand’s broad trajectory as a spacepower will change under Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin.

The integration of space into defensive aspects of national security also marked a new stage in Thailand’s satellite program with the launch of Napa-1, the country’s first security-focused satellite, in August 2019. Footnote 137 A core mission of Napa-1 is space situational awareness (SSA)—the identification of potential foreign satellite-based espionage operations, and the monitoring of space objects falling over Thailand. Footnote 138 This represents a significant development in Thailand’s satellite capabilities, but the country’s space strategy remains reliant on international supply chains and the dominance of Western companies—the construction of Napa-1 was contracted to Dutch firm ISISpace. Napa-2, launched in July 2021, relied on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket and the launch facilities at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida, indicating the ongoing importance of the RTAF’s cooperation with US Space Force.Footnote 139

Bilateral and multilateral collaboration

Thailand’s growing space presence has necessitated expanding bilateral and multilateral collaboration, including international treaties and inter-agency cooperation agreements. This includes being party to the 1967 UN Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space and the 1968 UN Agreement on the Rescue of Astronauts, the Return of Astronauts and the Return of Objects Launched into Outer Space. Bilaterally, Thailand has signed agreements with France (2000) and India (2002) on cooperation in space technology and its application and peaceful space exploration and use, respectively, as well as a MoU with Russia on cooperation in space technology and its application. Footnote 140

The Theos program demonstrated to Thailand the need “to find global partners for inter-agency cooperation that would cut costs and increase resources”; a component failure led to collaboration between GISTDA and the Swedish Space Corporation to re-establish communication with Theos. Ultimately this initiated a push for inter-agency cooperation, including the 2010 Inter-Operability, Cooperation and Engineering (ICE) project with Taiwan’s NSPO, covering cross-support in a range of areas concerning satellites. Footnote 141

Such agreements also link Thailand to the PRC and the United States. Thailand is a member of the Asia-Pacific Space Cooperation Organization (APSCO), set up in 2008 and headquartered in Beijing, which shares resources in space science, technology, and application to promote multilateral cooperation and facilitate capacity building. This is a multilateral organization including Bangladesh, China, Iran, Mongolia, Pakistan, Peru, Thailand and Turkey. Member states gain access to Masters and PhD training sponsored by APSCO and the China Scholarship Council, through cooperation with three top Chinese universities, as well as short-term training programs for over 150 people each year. Footnote 142

In 2018, the RTAF signed an agreement with United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) on SSA services and data sharing, facilitating requests for specific data critical to satellite support from US Air Force Space Command; from 2019, these functions were taken over by the newly established United States Space Force Space Command. Similar agreements are maintained with sixteen other countries, two intergovernmental organizations (the European Space Agency and the European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites), and more than 70 commercial satellite owners, operators, and launchers. Footnote 143

As Thailand’s space ambitions continue to develop, such multilateral and bilateral collaborations are likely to increase, as evinced most recently by Thailand’s Excellence Center for Space Technology’s MoU with the UK-based In-Space Missions Limited, with the aim of jointly manufacturing a satellite within two years and use it within three.Footnote 144 So far, Thailand has been fairly open to such collaborations; France, India, Russia, Sweden, Taiwan, the United States, and the members states of APSCO constitute a diverse range of countries which do not on necessarily commit Thailand to a particular geopolitical alignment on space. As a developing middle spacepower, this makes strategic sense as a means of avoiding dependencies. It is notable that Thailand engages in data sharing and support collaboration with both the United States (bilaterally) and the PRC (bilaterally, discussed below, and multilaterally through APSCO). Thailand’s relationship with these two leading spacepowers and major geopolitical players in Southeast Asia will significantly influence the trajectory of its space program.

The key challenge: balancing the United States and China

Thailand is a long-standing treaty ally of the United States, but the size and proximity of the PRC necessitate careful navigation of bilateral relationships with both powers. This is becoming more difficult for Thailand in the context of China’s rapidly increasing influence within the country, including elite capture at high levels of the Thai government, particularly since the United States began to distance itself from Bangkok following the 2014 coup. Footnote 145

Thailand’s traditional default foreign policy position has been to accommodate the United States, but a combination of domestic factors and the consideration of China have caused this to shift under certain circumstances. A case in point was NASA’s request to use Thailand’s U-Tapao airbase for scientific study as part of a 2012 proposal for a meteorological research project; such requests were routine, with U-Tapao often used by the US military. Footnote 146 However, in this case, the project met with considerable domestic opposition in Thailand on the grounds that the use of U-Tapao was part of a US strategy to militarily contain China in Southeast Asia, and allowing NASA to use the base might compromise Thailand’s sovereignty and continued ability to balance its relationships with both China and the United States, potentially limiting future cooperation with Beijing. Ultimately, Thailand resolved to subject the issue to public scrutiny in parliament, delaying the plan, and NASA withdrew the request before the debate took place. Footnote 147

A key area where the growing consideration of China is likely to continue to shape Thailand’s space strategy is scientific investment and collaboration. China is involved in Thailand’s overall scientific development via a range of collaborations. These include the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Innovation Cooperation Center (CASICCB), its first overseas organization, which opened in Bangkok in 2016. Its website lists a number of space-related research projects, including advanced microsatellite technology; the “Digital Belt and Road,” building “a digital earth platform to achieve global big data sharing, crop monitoring, etc.”; a “BeiDou-based vehicle intelligent control system” for BeiDou-based navigation and positioning; ultrahigh-resolution cameras for use with satellites and drones; and space automation technology including robots and high-end manufacturing equipment. Footnote 148

Thailand’s adoption of China’s BeiDou GNSS is likely to be of crucial importance in determining Thailand’s capacity to continue to balance its relationship with both China and the United States. A core reason why major spacepowers have developed alternatives to the US’ GPS—such as the European Space Agency’s Galileo, Russia’s GLONASS, and China’s BeiDou itself—is that such systems have significant potential to create technological dependency. Footnote 149 This has knock-on effects in terms of external influence over any application of such technology, and as such has the potential to significantly shift international alignment, Footnote 150 not only over space strategy but also other policy areas dependent on GNSS.

Such effects of BeiDou’s adoption are already apparent in Thailand. Wuhan Optics Valley BeiDou Holding Group Co. Ltd. holds two subsidiary companies in the country, focusing on the promotion and popularization of BeiDou technology and application in The Association of Southeast Asian Nations while also developing domestic market applications. It provides high-tech products, R&D and technology services, satellite navigation infrastructure construction, commercial satellite auxiliary product operation, commercial real estate investment and management, and industry and equity investment. Footnote 151 This includes collaboration with Thailand’s National Science and Technology Development Agency, alongside Kunming Rongzhihuitu Business Consulting Co., to introduce smart transportation and a WeChat-based platform to develop local transport and tourism networks. Footnote 152 The company’s involvement in the establishment of China-ASEAN BeiDou Technology City in Thailand will enable the expansion of BeiDou coverage further into Southeast Asia, Footnote 153 effectively making Thailand a hub from which China has the potential to extend technological dependency via any regional digital infrastructure reliant on BeiDou.

However, in other areas there are signs of pushback against China’s influence over Thailand’s space program. As discussed above, Thailand favors non-Chinese technology and launch providers for satellites themselves, primarily Western companies. The government’s focus appears to be on building domestic technological capacity and sustainable economic development in a way that does not allow China, or domestic lobby groups, to gain a comprehensive edge; this extends to the RTAF itself, which collaborates with NASA on environmental monitoring projects and via scholarship programs for Thai astronauts. Footnote 154 Settapong Malisuwan of the Ministry for Digital Economy and Society has argued that “Thailand must strive to maintain balance in the space competition between great powers, and to develop our own domestic space industry…otherwise, we’ll simply have to accept their policies and we’ll have no bargaining power.” Footnote 155 Nonetheless, worries regarding a shift toward China do exist. Col Setthapong Mali Suwan, Vice-Chairman of Telecommunications at the Ministry of the Digital Economy and Society, has voiced concern that GISTDA Executive Director Pakorn Apaphant favors Chinese technology and launch service providers. Footnote 156

Most significantly, the avoidance of dependency on major spacepowers does not simply come down to providers of satellite components and launch facilities—an area where, despite these concerns, Thailand has so far successfully managed to ensure a diverse international supply chain and network of bilateral and multilateral collaborations. Rather, the space sector cannot be viewed in isolation from the broader requirements of national development. The key challenge Thailand faces in continuing to develop and maintain sovereignty over its domestic space industry is rather how the sector interacts with core foreign technologies such as China’s BeiDou. If the country’s digital infrastructure becomes locked into technological dependence on BeiDou-based platforms, then the development of satellite systems going forward is more likely to require integration with them. This has significant potential to realign Thailand’s space strategy and related supply chains toward the PRC even if Thailand continues to maintain a diversified approach to satellite supply chains and inter-agency collaboration. Thailand’s joining of Chinese-sponsored International Lunar Research Station (ILRS) program in April 2024 - only the ninth country to do so - indicates the pull of technological dependency.Footnote 157

Conclusion: middle spacepowers and great power competition in Asia

Industrial policy is hard. It has been argued that many successful cases in Asian developmental state’s glorious histories—including Taiwan’s semiconductor story—occurred despite, not because, the government interventions. In the past decades, Taiwanese industrial policies aiming to gain an upper hand in the car parts and biomedical industries have largely under-delivered. Upstream automotive suppliers such as Bosch, Continental, and Delphi remain unchallenged, with Taiwanese producers competing at the lower end with Chinese, Mexican, and others. Taiwanese firms build 60–77 GHz RADAR modules with mmWave sensors with antenna elements for car onboard interfaces but depend on foreign IC design and German ceramic materials. In the biomedical field, the Taiwanese have been interested in genomic data, but there has been little to show aside from expensive sequencing machine purchases and a government-supported biobank. Critics would point out that Taiwan did not create an antiviral vaccine for COVID-19, despite its early achievements in preventive public health. In the end, analysts cannot rule out the possibility that space industrial policies by Taiwan and Thailand would have marginal effects. This paper has not discussed the regional competitive environment, but one only needs to look at South Korea with its chaebol resources and India with highly developed (and loosely regulated!) launch capabilities to anticipate that Taiwan and Thailand will face an uphill climb.

As developmental states, Taiwan and Thailand remain conservative in strategic choices: betting on mature technologies, leveraging existing core competence in the private sector, relying on market intelligence and funding networks in the United States and Europe, investing in human resources and domestic R&D, and quietly or openly integrating space further into its broader national security strategy in terms of military support, counter-espionage, and environmental surveillance and monitoring. Critics may say their space agencies lack vision or market savviness. One could counter that they make responsible uses of government resources, taking cautious first steps as newly mandated agencies with significant capacity gaps to fill and bureaucratic turf wars to win.

Fundamentally, geoeconomics constraints have changed for these countries since the 1990s. During the Cold War, these countries’ defense-security and developmental-globalization imperatives had overlapped to a large extent given their bilateral relations with the United States. While both countries remain highly exposed to political and regulatory demands from the US and European governments, given these leading spacepowers’ market impact, at least in the case of Thailand the options in technological, capital, and new market development partnerships are wide today given recent Chinese economic expansionism and a general lowering of barriers to entry into the global supply chain for the space industry. With the continuing momentum toward techno-nationalism for both the United States and the PRC and China’s turn toward a more insular economy, these diversification or hedging options may turn out to be strategic dilemmas for the national planners. Thailand’s reliance on Western countries for components, facilities, and expertise, coupled with China’s growing provision of key elements of the country’s digital infrastructure is likely to be unsustainable. This is because ultimately it will mean integrating Western technology into Chinese digital and GNSS frameworks, which would become unacceptable for Western providers operating under increasingly restrictive rules at home. As Thailand’s space program leads to requirements for increasingly advanced equipment and deeper international collaborations, it is possible that such “securization” considerations will necessitate a fundamental rethink of its space supply chain strategy.

In this sense, Taiwanese space agency officials have a relatively simpler task at hand of working within the Western supply chains. NSPO and other space policy insiders have directed their primary concerns to market competitors including South Korea, India, and even Australia.Footnote 158 China is shutting its doors to the global space industry supply chains, and there is no way to plan around it aside from reinforcing Taiwan’s interdependence with American firms. The national security dimension and implications of space assets will remain highly repressed in Taiwanese policy debates and public discourse, although it would seem inevitable that for the United States to help the Taiwanese military the space capabilities would have to be integrated into the hardware upgrades and wargaming preparations. Yet the Taiwanese military has been very quiet as a stakeholder in President Tsai’s championship of the space development policy.Footnote 159 In the third phase and beyond, the use of space will likely remain purely scientific or commercial for Taiwan to avoid the obvious reality of Taiwan’s dependence on US protection.

Footnotes

1 Bryce Technology (2023). Also see FAA (2018). The following market subsector figures should be interpreted critically. Varying measures and estimations on space sub-sectors are often difficult to reconcile for an accurate and consistent over time market assessment. Allied Market Research (2021, 2022). PWC (2020) compares space industry projections by major sources; Military Satellites Global Market Report 2022 cited by GlobeNewswire (2022) states that the global military satellites market was predicted to grow from $52.28 billion in 2021 to $58.8 billion in 2026 at a compound annual growth rate of 1.2 percent. If true, this amount seems to dwarf the commercial figures cited above.

2 PR Newswire (2024); see Fortune Business Insights (2021) for an alternative projection from $25.15 billion in 2019 to $54.17 billion in 2027 at a CAGR of 12.45 percent in the 2020–2027 period.

3 See Deloitte (Reference Dolman2022) on the rapid decline of launch and payload costs starting with the Falcon X breakthrough.

4 Millan et al. (2019); Goldman Sachs (2017).

5 Link Communications System UK (2021).

6 Morgan Stanley (2020).

7 European Investment Bank (2019).

8 Footnote Ibid, p. 6. The report notes a need for more risk capital and finance for space for commercialization of products and reaching company maturity and emphasizes a continuing role for EU defense policy and public sector “pull” mechanisms for innovation and market development (p. 10).

9 OECD (2021), 8–9; SpaceTech Analytics (2021). Also see OECD’s update statistical approach. OECD (2019, 2022).

10 Deloitte (Reference Dolman2022), p. 3.

11 Footnote Ibid, p. 4.

12 The White House (2021).

13 CSIS (2022); CRS (2020), pp. 40–44.

14 Deloitte (Reference Dolman2022), pp. 25, 42, 92, 99.

15 Paikowsky (2017).

16 Harding (2013).

17 Moltz (2011).

19 Goswami and Garretson (2020); Goswami (2022).

20 US Department of Commerce (2014) estimated a loss of sales opportunities for US firms around estimated from 988 million to 2 billion in 2009–2012.

21 CRS (2016), p. 12.

22 CRS (2012), p. 1.

23 Other governments’ budgets amounted to 10 percent. CRS (2016), p. 2.

24 US Director of National Intelligence (2011), Harrison and Strohmeyer (2022), and Callahan (Reference Callahan2010) makes a clear case for secure commercial access to space—specifically, launch services—as a national security imperative.

25 Aerospace Corporation (2021); CRS (2018); DoC and FAA (2017).

26 US Department of the Air Force (2023); Wong et al. (Reference Wong2023); FAA (2018).

27 NASDAQ (2022); Welser IV (Reference Welser IV2016).

28 For a sample of the liberal-institutionalist perspective, using the language of cooperation on “global commons,” see Patton (2022). For a realist counterpoint, see Starling et al. (Reference Starling, Massa, Mulder and Siegel2021).

29 Daniels (Reference Daniels2020).

30 Bryce Technology (2017).

32 Yoo (Reference Yoo2019); Dolman (2022).

33 Footnote Ibid, p. 30.

34 Cheung and Fukushima (Reference Cheung, Fukushima, Saadia and Blount2023); Harvey et al. (2010).

35 Siripurapu and Berman (Reference Siripurapu and Berman2023).

36 Hauge (2020), p. 2072.

37 For a similar private sector perspective, see Chin et al. (Reference Chin2021).

38 ESPI (2021), pp. 9–12.

39 Berglof and Cable (Reference Berglof and Cable2018) discussed the impact of intellectual properties for new globalization in a neo-Schumpeterian way; OECD (2019, 2021).

41 Barbaroux (Reference Barbaroux2016), p. 10.

42 Footnote Ibid, p. 35.

43 Dunphy (2016), p. 15.

44 EU-Japan Centre for Industrial Cooperation (2015).

45 For studies on high-tech sectors, see Autry (Reference Autry2018), Robinson and Mazzucato (2019), Lee and Tunzelmann (Reference Lee and Von Tunzelmann2005), Lee et al. (Reference Lee, Nouwens and Lin Tay2022), Hauge (Reference Hauge2020), and Kamakura (2022).

46 ADB (2021), p. xxii.

47 Footnote Ibid, p. 153.

48 Undseth and Jolly (2015).

49 Bryce Technology (2022).

50 A similar reasoning led Chinese analyst Gui (2022) to predict that while the politics and policy of techno-nationalism in service of great power competition will likely persist, the implementation of “decoupling” will be pragmatic to mitigate the domestic costs of economic statecraft.

51 Kamakura (2022), p. 261.

52 Hwang and Chen (Reference Hwang and Ning Chen2022); Gillet (2021); Lee and Tunzelmann (Reference Lee and Von Tunzelmann2005).

53 Lee and Tunzelmann (Reference Lee and Von Tunzelmann2005).

55 This section pulls together policy guidelines, evaluations, and case studies from official Taiwanese government sources, affiliated space institutes, and media interviews of space officials. The most authoritative and factually detailed account of Taiwan’s space policy is the unclassified version of the Ministry of Science and Technology’s report, “The Third Phase of the National Space Science & Technology Long-Range Development Plan (2019–2028).” NSPO-PLAN-0038 (Chinese version only), 16 January 2019. Henceforth referred to as NSPO (2019).

56 NSPO (2019), pp. 20–31, 57.

57 Footnote Ibid, pp. 38–39.

58 Department of Information Services (2022). For NSPO’s assessment of the first two phases, see NSPO (2019), pp. 41–42, 103–104.

59 NSPO (2019), p. 32.

60 One source suggests that the incoming President Ma Ying-jeou wished to decouple space science from the military—consistent with his reconciliatory stance before Beijing. Lin interview, 8–22.

61 Global Security (2021).

62 NSPO (2019), p. 31; Asia Times (2019).

63 Lin (2021b); Taiwan Today (2021).

64 NSPO (2019), pp. 8, 62, 96–97. We will continue to use the term NSPO below, as the interviews and research were conducted before the agency’s name change.

65 Focus Taiwan (20–22b); Lin interviews, 8–22. For example, NARLabs has transferred remote-sensing expertise to NAPO.

66 Borroz (Reference Borroz2021), p. 3.

67 NSPO (2019), p. 92. Lin interviews, 8–22.

68 National Science and Technology Council (2022); Center for Global Affairs and Science Engagement (2022).

69 MIRDC (2022).

71 Lin interview 7–22.

72 TASA (2024); Focus Taiwan (2023).

73 TASA (2022); Strong (2019).

75 Lin (2021a, Reference Lin2021b).

76 Center for Global Affairs and Science Engagement (2022).

77 NSPO has offer projected revenue for the commercial value-added of phase 3. NSPO (2019), pp. 105–106.

78 Footnote Ibid, pp. 32, 53–55.

79 Lin interviews, 8–22. In contrast, US and European firms are used to building larger, custom-designed and built satellites, without the Asian manufacturers’ finely honed ability to scale up.

80 NSPO (2019), pp. 76–80; Lin interviews, 8–22.

81 Gillet (2021); Lin interviews, 8–22.

82 Infinio Capital (2022).

83 Lin (2021a); Lin interviews, 8–22.

84 Center for Global Affairs and Science Engagement (2022).

85 Lin interviews, 8–22.

87 Wang (2021).

88 National Development Fund (2017–2022).

89 National Development Fund (2017–2022).

90 Idem.

91 Examples of established electronics fabrication suppliers whose revenue from SpaceX orders constitute a small percentage of the corporate revenue include Chongqing Huatong Computer which fabricates printed circuit boards. Lin interviews, 8–22.

92 Lin interviews, 8–22; Formosa News (2022).

94 Chan et al. (Reference Chan, Chung, Cheng, Chung and Au2021), pp. 801–838, finds the importance of social capital accumulated at the industrial cluster—not just firm—level for sustainable growth, innovation, and strategic positioning of the sector.

95 MOST (2021).

96 NSPO (2019), p. 21.

97 Strong (2022).

98 Liu et al. (2016).

99 Focus Taiwan (2022a).

100 Ting (2021); GIS.FCU (2024).

101 Taipei Times (2014); JAXA (2014); Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics (2016). Financing needs might have been a motivation for JAXA to invite Taiwanese participation. Lin (2014).

102 Lin (2021c).

103 Lin interviews, 7–22; Semiconductors Today (Reference Strong2022).

104 Lin interviews, 7–22.

105 Lin interviews, 8–22.

106 Lin (2020).

107 Lin interviews, 7–22.

108 Asia Times (2019).

110 eoPortal (2013); Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. (2019).

111 Jaffe (2021).

112 Formosa News (2022).

113 Idem.

114 Masutti et al. (2017).

115 Formosa News (2022).

116 Lin interviews, July and August 2022. Understandably, the interest and role of the Taiwanese military are conspicuously absent in MOST-NSPO’s 2019 report, which dutifully mentioned national security interests and the military as one among many government agencies whose interests are served by space, NSPO (2019), pp. 32–37.

117 Lin interviews, 8–22.

118 FRS Taiwan Program (2021).

119 To complicate the picture, Taiwanese firms have supplied Israeli military satellites, and possibly others as well. Lin interviews, 8–22.

120 Harding (2013), p. 9.

121 Harding (2016).

122 Gunter’s Space Page (no date b).

123 Gunter’s Space Page (no date a).

127 Bangkok Post (2023).

128 Wipatayotin (Reference Wipatayotin2023).

129 Lohatepanont (2020).

130 Formichella et al. (2023).

131 Lohatepanont (2020).

132 Formichella et al. (2023).

133 Royal Thai Air Force (2020).

134 C. T. N. News (Reference Daniels2020).

136 Royal Thai Air Force (2020).

137 Lohatepanont (2020).

138 C. T. N. News (Reference Daniels2020).

139 Dominguez (2021).

140 Formichella et al. (2023).

142 Asia-Pacific Space Cooperation Organization (no date).

143 United States Strategic Command Public Affairs (2018).

144 Bangkok Post (2023).

145 Evenstar Institute (2023).

146 Busbarat (Reference Busbarat2016).

147 Busbarat (Reference Busbarat2016), p. 249.

148 CASICCB (no date).

150 Evenstar Institute (2023).

151 General Office of Hubei Provincial People’s Government (2016).

152 Zhou (Reference Zhou2020).

153 Jory (2017).

154 Saperstein (2020).

155 Lohatepanont (2020).

156 Saperstein (2020).

157 Bosquillon (2024).

158 Lin interviews, 8–22.

159 Idem.

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Figure 1. Composition of the space industry.Source: Defense SA, “Space Industry 2016,” p. 10.