Amazon Leo is set to add another 32 satellites to low Earth orbit with its first launch on an Ariane 6 rocket operated by Arianespace, marking a key milestone in the company’s European launch campaign. The mission, designated Leo Europe 1 (LE-01), is targeted for February 12 and represents the first of 18 planned Arianespace launches supporting Amazon’s broadband satellite constellation.
The launch campaign began with the departure of Canopée, a hybrid, wind-assisted cargo vessel purpose-built to transport Ariane 6 components from France to the European Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. The ship carries stages and hardware for the Ariane 6, specifically the Ariane 64 configuration, which includes four boosters designed to maximize payload capacity for constellation deployments.
LE-01 will place 32 satellites into orbit, increasing the size of the Amazon Leo network, which has already launched more than 150 spacecraft. Beyond constellation growth, the Amazon-Arianespace agreement underpins Europe’s independent access to space and supports regional industrial activity. Amazon estimates its Leo program will contribute €2.8 billion to EU GDP and support an average of 3,270 jobs annually through 2029.
- First Arianespace launch for Amazon Leo, using Ariane 6 (Ariane 64 variant)
- LE-01 mission to deploy 32 satellites to low Earth orbit in 2026
- First of 18 contracted Arianespace launches for the Leo constellation
- Canopée hybrid cargo ship used to transport Ariane 6 stages across the Atlantic
- Amazon projects €2.8 billion EU GDP contribution and 3,270 jobs supported through 2029
“We already have six successful Amazon Leo missions under our belt, and seeing Canopée depart with Ariane 6 brings us one step closer to our first launch with Arianespace,” said Rajeev Badyal, vice president of Amazon Leo. “Adding a heavy-lift rocket like Ariane 6 allows us to deploy more satellites at a time and accelerate our deployment plans.”
🌐 Analysis
The Ariane 6 launch adds geographic and supplier diversity to Amazon Leo’s deployment strategy at a time when launch availability remains a constraint for large LEO constellations. For Arianespace, the multi-launch Amazon agreement provides early commercial momentum for Ariane 6 as Europe seeks to re-establish heavy-lift cadence amid competition from SpaceX and other emerging launch providers.
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