WorldView-3 Satellite Sensor (0.31m) / Image: DigitalGlobe

DigitalGlobe, the leading provider of commercial high-resolution earth observation and advanced geospatial solutions, today announced its plans to accelerate the launch of WorldView-4, previously named GeoEye-2, to mid-2016 to meet demand from DigitalGlobe’s Direct Access and other commercial customers. A significant catalyst for this increased opportunity was the U.S. Department of Commerce’s recent decision to allow DigitalGlobe to sell imagery with resolution of up to 25 centimeters.

“As a result of the U.S. Government’s recent decision to allow us to sell our highest quality imagery, we’ve seen sufficient demand that justifies the accelerated launch of WorldView-4,” said Jeffrey R. Tarr, President and Chief Executive Officer of DigitalGlobe. “This will extend our industry leadership, capture more of our customers’ mapping and monitoring missions, provide an even stronger foundation on which to grow our Geospatial Big Data  and analytic capabilities, and uniquely address pressing global challenges. By placing this asset on orbit where it can generate revenue rather than storing it on the ground, we will improve returns and create shareowner value.”

DigitalGlobe now plans to launch WorldView-4 in mid-2016 providing our customers with assured access to 30 centimeter resolution imagery – the highest resolution imagery commercially available. WorldView-4 will serve an expanding addressable market for high resolution imagery at 30 centimeters, and the decision to accelerate its launch is supported by demand from DigitalGlobe’s existing customer base and is expected to be accretive to returns. Together with WorldView-3, which will launch in August, and the rest of DigitalGlobe’s constellation, WorldView-4 will extend the company’s lead in resolution, accuracy, spectral diversity, revisit rate, and other aspects of imagery quality so critical to the missions of DigitalGlobe’s various customers.

Note

Effective immediately, DigitalGlobe has renamed the GeoEye-2 satellite. Moving forward, this satellite will be known as WorldView-4. We believe this will mitigate any future market confusion and ensure that the satellite is clearly identified as part of the larger DigitalGlobe constellation. The new name – WorldView-4 – puts it on par, from both a branding and capabilities perspective, with the other sub-50 cm WorldView-class sensors.

Source: DigitalGlobe