WASHINGTON — The Texas Space Commission has awarded more than $26 million to five companies in the latest round of awards designed to stimulate the state’s space industry.
The commission’s board approved the awards at an April 16 meeting. They come after awards made to five other companies in February and to four economic development and regional government organizations in January.
The five companies winning grants were:
The commission’s board approved all five grants unanimously with the exception of KULR. Heather Wilson, president of the University of Texas El Paso, voted against the grant but did not discuss why.
“The projects awarded funding today will each play a critical role in ensuring Texas’ place as a leader in the emerging space economy while expanding our capabilities as a nation,” Gwen Griffin, chair of the board of the Texas Space Commission, said in a statement.
The awards come from a $150 million appropriation made by the Texas Legislature in 2023 that also established the commission and the Texas Aerospace Research and Space Economy Consortium, or TARSEC. The commission has allocated $95.3 million of that funding to date.
The commission said it is continuing to evaluate proposals it received for the remaining funding. In a call for proposals that closed in January, it received 284 applications with a combined value of $3.46 billion.
More money may be on the way for the commission as the Texas Legislature meets. In a speech at the AIAA ASCENDxTexas conference in February in Houston, Norm Garza, executive director of the committee, said he hoped the large number of applications would serve as a “demand signal” to legislators in its ongoing session.
“It might encourage the legislature, because Texas is sitting in a very nice spot with a surplus, to consider increasing the available funding to the space commission,” he said then.
Rep. Greg Bonnen, chair of the House Appropriations Committee in the Texas Legislature and one of the proponents of the commission, offered similar comments at that conference. “Hopefully, in the budget we’re going to see some further allocation of resources on top of what we’ve already done.”
Hours before the Texas Space Commission’s board met to approve the grant applications, Bonnen and others appeared before a legislative committee to discuss a bill that would revise the law that created the commission and TARSEC.
“This is cleanup legislation, if you will, that improves on some of the aspects of what we did last session,” Bonnen told the Committee on Delivery of Government Efficiency. That includes abolishing a spaceport trust find that had been created to support development and expansion of spaceports in the state.
Executives from Firefly Aerospace and Starlab Space — which received grants from the Texas Space Commission in February — spoke at the hearing in support of the legislation and the commission’s work.