By Evan Grey, Legal Contributor
The Bottom Line
The commercial sector can now route data flawlessly across proliferated orbital meshes. Getting it to the ground is another problem entirely. The industry has built roughly 10 percent of the optical ground infrastructure it needs, and the capital-expenditure standoff between satellite operators and ground-station providers shows no sign of breaking. The next 24 months will decide whether the orbital mesh becomes a warfighting backbone or the most expensive intranet ever built.
The commercial sector has embraced optical inter-satellite links as the backbone of next-generation constellations, building on the standardization work the Space Development Agency drove through its OCT requirements for the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture. Operators can now route data seamlessly across proliferated orbital meshes; getting it to the ground is another problem entirely. The industry has built roughly 10 percent of the optical ground infrastructure it needs. We have a terrestrial transport crisis.
The Orbital Bottleneck and Supply Chain Crisis
Before the industry can address the ground segment, it must survive the manufacturing bottleneck in orbit. The Pentagon plans to invest roughly $35 billion in the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture through fiscal year 2029, having already awarded over $4.7 billion for the first 101 satellites. A January 2026 Government Accountability Office report found that no architecture-level schedule exists, the Department of Defense lacks a reliable life-cycle cost estimate, and combatant commands have insufficient insight into system requirements. Tranche 1 is now a full year behind its original schedule, with Acting SDA Director Dr. Gurpartap Sandhoo attributing the delays to supply chain bottlenecks for optical communication terminals and encryption devices, on-orbit checkout failures, a Falcon 9 upper-stage anomaly, and a recent 43-day government shutdown. The agency now targets an initial warfighting capability in early 2027.
The Optical Ground Station Deficit
Even if the Space Development Agency resolves its orbital supply-chain crisis, a much larger physical barrier looms below.
Legacy radio-frequency downlinks are fundamentally tapped out. Spectrum is congested, and traditional RF bands simply cannot scale to match the throughput generated by modern SAR and persistent infrared tracking constellations. The only viable alternative is the optical space-to-ground downlink, predominantly utilizing the 1550 nanometer wavelength. But unlike the vacuum of orbit, terrestrial downlinks must contend with atmospheric turbulence and cloud attenuation.
To achieve the 99.9 percent carrier-grade availability demanded by military and enterprise users, operators cannot rely on a single optical ground station. The DLR ONUBLA+ model, published by Rattenbury et al. in the 2025 Wiley International Journal of Satellite Communications and Networking, demonstrates that European networks of at least four stations can reach 98 to 99 percent predicted reliability. However, foundational DLR research by Fuchs et al. indicates these sites must be spaced over 1,000 kilometers apart to ensure uncorrelated cloud cover. A recent Australasian network study evaluating eight stations spanning 60 degrees of longitude yielded only 69 percent average individual site availability. Overcoming localized weather blockages requires six to eleven geographically diverse sites just to guarantee coverage for a single region. A truly global, highly available network demands dozens of optical ground stations across multiple continents.
Optical Ground Station Deficit · By the Numbers
30–50
Operational optical ground stations globally (estimated)
200–500
Stations needed by end of the decade
~10%
Current infrastructure vs. requirement
6–11
Diverse sites needed per region for 99.9% availability
That infrastructure does not exist at scale. The global installed base sits at an estimated 30 to 50 operational optical ground stations. This estimate accounts for Germany’s WORK Microwave, which delivered the only operational SDA optical ground station to date, alongside two new Swedish Space Corporation facilities in Australia and Chile (manufactured by Safran Space as part of ESA’s ARTES ScyLight program), the four-node European Optical Nucleus Network, three DLR stations, two primary NASA facilities, Chinese stations in Yunnan and Tibet, and early commercial deployments from companies like U.S. Electrodynamics. Even factoring in classified military sites and smaller academic nodes, the total remains severely constrained.
Industry projections indicate that 200 to 500 stations are needed by the end of the decade. French manufacturer Cailabs, backed by 91 million euros in funding, expects to deploy up to 50 optical ground stations annually by 2027. Cailabs has already partnered with SES to test its TILBA-OGS L10 stations at 10 Gbps bidirectional throughput, and its hardware underpins USEI’s DiamondLink commercial service. Even if other vendors match this trajectory, reaching the 500-station threshold by 2030 requires a manufacturing and deployment cadence that does not yet exist. The gap is an order of magnitude.
The market is constrained by a capital-expenditure standoff. Satellite operators are hesitant to install expensive optical downlink payloads without a reliable, globally diverse terrestrial network already in place. Conversely, infrastructure providers refuse to invest the billions required to secure real estate, lay fiber backhaul, and build dozens of optical ground stations without guaranteed orbital traffic to monetize. Vertically integrated operators like SpaceX may solve this for themselves through sheer buildout scale, but that only deepens the problem for everyone else. The deficit is not whether any single actor can get data to the ground; it is whether the broader architecture can.
Golden Dome and the Political Pressure Cooker
This infrastructure deficit is no longer just an engineering problem but a direct threat to a major White House policy objective. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (P.L. 119-21, Title II, §20003) appropriated $24.4 billion to the Secretary of Defense for integrated air and missile defense, a figure President Trump called an initial deposit. The fiscal year 2026 defense appropriations bill added another $13.4 billion. While the Congressional Budget Office estimated the 20-year cost at between $161 billion and $542 billion depending on architecture scope, Golden Dome program manager General Michael Guetlein stated in March 2026 that the official estimate has risen to $185 billion.
Golden Dome requires prototype technologies by 2028 and relies entirely on the PWSA to provide near-continuous global missile warning and fire-control-quality tracks. The satellites must detect hypersonic glide vehicles, pass tracking data across the optical mesh, and downlink it to shooters on the ground in seconds. If the optical downlink fails due to cloud cover or insufficient ground stations, the kill chain breaks.
Senator Mark Kelly questioned the cost, capability, and “plain physics” of Golden Dome, warning against spending up to a trillion dollars on a system that might fundamentally fail to work at scale.
Lawmakers are already voicing doubts. During a late-March Senate Armed Services Committee hearing, Senator Mark Kelly explicitly questioned the cost, capability, and “plain physics” of the Golden Dome architecture. He warned against spending up to a trillion dollars on a system that might fundamentally fail to work at scale.
Mitigations: Relays, Allied Optical Ground Stations, and Ka-Band Fallback
The Pentagon and the commercial sector are actively pursuing ways to bypass the ground problem. Geostationary data relays offer the most mature option. Space Compass recently purchased an optical data relay satellite from Swissto12, allowing LEO satellites to beam data optically to GEO, which then downlinks via radio frequency to bypass weather. DLR analysis shows this relay method can transfer 2,552 terabytes per year with 100 percent optical availability in space. Kepler Communications is advancing a similar model, having launched 10 optical relay satellites in January 2026.
Airborne relays offer another route around the weather problem, though the operational concept remains unproven at scale. On January 28, 2026, the SDA published a solicitation for space-to-air optical communication terminals (solicitation SDA-SN-26-0008). This followed a successful August 2025 demonstration in which the SDA, General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems, and Kepler established a bi-directional link between a satellite and an aircraft in flight. The agency wants space-to-air links operational by 2027 — an aggressive timeline given that no military has fielded a persistent airborne optical relay network.
Allied nations offer another potential lifeline. Five Eyes partners are building their own optical ground stations, as is the European Space Agency through programs like ScyLight and HydRON. Japan’s NICT has demonstrated satellite optical links since the 1990s and continues investing through its JDRS relay system. Australia’s EOS Space Systems operates adaptive-optics-equipped stations at Mt. Stromlo. These efforts are often quietly co-funded through parallel quantum key distribution programs that require identical ground-segment infrastructure. A federated allied optical ground station network could eventually help close the site-diversity gap, though no formal framework for shared military use currently exists.
When none of these options are available and optical downlinks are severed by weather, the system falls back to Ka-band RF links carried on the same satellites. The operational penalty is severe. Optical links deliver 10 to 100 Gbps, while Ka-band typically provides 100 Mbps to 2 Gbps. Bandwidth collapses, latency spikes, and the primary advantages of the optical mesh evaporate precisely when actionable intelligence is needed most. The throttled data then feeds downstream tactical networks at a fraction of the designed capacity.
The Stranded Asset Warning
The space industry must abandon the illusion that optical communications end in orbit. A proliferated constellation with flawless inter-satellite links but insufficient optical ground station infrastructure is nothing more than a localized intranet in the sky — extraordinarily efficient at moving data in circles and incapable of delivering it where it matters.
The state has provided the capital to build the space segment, but the operational success of the entire architecture now hinges on terrestrial construction. If commercial operators and defense primes do not solve the space-to-ground optical bottleneck, their mega-constellations will become stranded assets, incredibly efficient at moving data in circles above the Earth while starving the tactical edge of the intelligence it actually requires to fight and win.
Where the Deficit Breaks
Key Milestones
LATE 2026–2027
Tranche 2 Transport Layer Deliveries
Tests whether the optical terminal supply chain can scale beyond Tranche 1 volumes
2026–2027
SDA Ground Entry Point Contract Awards
Signals whether the Pentagon is serious about closing the terrestrial gap
2027
GEO Relay Services Go Live
Kepler and Space Compass test whether the relay bypass can deliver at scale
2028
Golden Dome Prototype Deadline
First real stress test of the entire kill chain — sensor to shooter, including the downlink
The downlink deficit will either be resolved or exposed by a handful of near-term milestones. SDA’s Tranche 2 Transport Layer deliveries in late 2026 and 2027 will reveal whether the optical terminal supply chain can scale beyond Tranche 1 volumes. The Golden Dome 2028 prototype deadline will force the first real stress test of the entire kill chain, from sensor to shooter, including the downlink.
On the ground, upcoming SDA contract awards for Ground Entry Point expansion will signal whether the Pentagon is serious about closing the terrestrial gap or continuing to rely on fragmented commercial buildout. In orbit, Kepler’s and Space Compass’s GEO relay services will test whether the relay bypass can deliver at scale. In between, the first operational demonstrations of space-to-air optical relay will determine whether the airborne bypass is a viable hedge or a paper solution. The next 24 months will decide whether the orbital mesh becomes a warfighting backbone or the most expensive intranet ever built.
About the Author
Evan Grey is a legal contributor for SatNews. A lawyer with a focus on regulatory policy and international relations, he specializes in the evolving geopolitical and industrial frameworks of the global space sector.


