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Satellite Earth Observation (EO) Remains a Satellite Industry Growth Driver as Focus Shifts from Imagery to InsightsCAMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 11, 2019 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- NSR’s Satellite-Based Earth Observation (EO), 11th Edition report, released today, projects Earth Observation satellite data and services represent a $56B cumulative revenue opportunity over the next ten years, growing to $7.2B annually in 2028. The demand for more data and insights will be driven by upcoming constellations, high-volume data pipelines, and subscriptions for insight services. As the industry continues to shift from imagery to insights, NSR’s Satellite-Based Earth Observation (EO) 11th Edition report shows a greater opportunity for downstream Information Products and Big Data analytics services, once issues of supply, distribution, and customer channels are overcome. In the near-term, data and imagery retain their value, even as volume-based platforms and subscriptions grow more prominent. Furthermore, NSR’s analysis of the commercial opportunity for non-imagery data indicates these applications show promising growth potential. “Currently there are strong, competing forces in the EO industry with technology pushing for volume and variety of data imagery. However, since each customer is different, challenges of scale exist,” states Dallas Kasaboski, NSR Senior Analyst and report author. “Traditional, usually government-based, contracts and funding for the provision of high and very high-resolution imagery dominate the market. Although we are also seeing the extraction of insightful, business intelligence from satellite data; change and scale are complicatedand expensive. More supply, or options, does not necessarily mean more business,” states Kasaboski. Given the many newcomers entering the EO business, the considerable costs and bottleneck of satellite constellation manufacturing and launching, and the growing pressure on the value of data; the market is expected to face consolidation. In recent years, satellite operators have begun aggressive horizontal and vertical integration. “New operators are sure to bring highly persistent data, delivered through advanced pipelines, mostly stored on, and managed from, the cloud. But competing with established players, or failing to gain key customers and distribution channels, it will create major obstacles to growth. There is ample opportunity in this market, but there is also redundancy, and an oversupply of potentially directionless data,” Kasaboski further adds. Despite challenges, NSR’s Satellite-Based Earth Observation (EO), 11th Edition report shows stronger growth than in previous years, owing to collaboration and technological development along the value chain, segmenting and forecasting the revenue opportunity for 7 market verticals, across 5 regions, via 4 segments, 3 datatypes, and 8 instrument resolutions. About the Report For additional information on this report, including a full table of contents, list of exhibits, and executive summary, please visit www.nsr.com or call NSR at +1-617-674-7743. About NSR Companies and Organizations Mentioned in NSR’s EO11 |