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ERAU Alum Creates Satellite Startup

ERAU Grad Creates Satellite Design Startup

Company plans to work with NASA, create jobs

By Stacey Wittig, QCBN

Katalyst Space Technologies, a modular satellite design and build company, has set down at Moonshot at NACET in Flagstaff. The tech company’s founder, Ghonhee Lee, reported that the benefits of Moonshot and the Flagstaff lifestyle, coupled with the city’s incentive program, helped them choose Flagstaff as a home base.

“Together, the pull from Moonshot and the city’s incentive helped us make the decision,” said Lee in an exclusive Quad Cities Business News interview.

“They took advantage of the Job Creation Incentive that the economic development team put together last year. It’s like a micro-grant for businesses planning to relocate to Flagstaff,” explained City of Flagstaff Business Attraction Manager Jack Fitchett. The City’s Economic Vitality Division team designed the Job Creation Incentive to attract employers that create quality, high-paying jobs.

At the end of this month, Katalyst Space Technologies will bring nine employees – four interns and five full-time people. The tech company plans to create more than 30 new jobs in the next three years. “We’re coming from Prescott and all over the country – Indiana, Florida – we’re very excited to be in Flagstaff, but we have some big challenges, like doubling our staff every year. We want to draw from local talent, but we’ll need to bring in people with very specific skills.”

The company does research and development around the manufacture and assembly of spacecraft components in low-Earth orbit. “OSAM [On-orbit Servicing, Assembly and Manufacturing] is an umbrella term for what we are doing,” said Lee. “Our satellites are designed to plug and play, mix and match with components that robotics can change over time.” Currently, they are working on prototypes on the ground. Their target timeframe to get things into the air is 2024-25.

As part of one of the key industries identified by the City of Flagstaff, Katalyst Space Technologies fit a criterion for the Job Creation Incentive, said Fitchett. The key industries targeted by the city to incentivize are: N Astronomy N Bioscience and Healthcare N Education N Environmental Technology N Manufacturing N Research and Development N Software and Information-Based

Technology

When Katalyst Space Technologies began forming in late 2019, they considered other cities such as the geospace hubs of Seattle, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and Colorado’s Front Range.

“We wanted to start this company and push boundaries in this industry, but it [the startup] coincided with the unraveling of the COVID pandemic,” said Lee, who launched the company in 2020. “The pandemic made it hard to begin networking in other cities – to meet the right people.”

Lee studied at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and in Northern Arizona since 2013, with a couple of years’ hiatus to work at Raytheon in Tucson. “We all have a strong connection to the area. We went to a Moonshot event right before the pandemic. The subject – intellectual property – caught our attention.”

At the Flagstaff event, Lee says they discovered that “these are folks we’d like to explore continuing to work with.” Since then, Moonshot at NACET has helped Katalyst Space Technologies with mentorship and guidance in securing capital.

To qualify for the Job Creation In-

Katalyst Space Technologies founder Ghonhee Lee studied at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Prescott before bringing his company to Flagstaff.

Photo by Stacey Wittig

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