Our Hannover Messe countdown series—featuring Ontario manufacturers and technology companies that will be showcasing at the world's largest industrial technology trade fair—continues with Rahul Goel, CEO of Markham-based NordSpace.
In this episode, Rahul discusses NordSpace's ambitious plan to develop an end-to-end responsive space launch system, getting to space more sustainably, and the advantages of being located in York Region. He also previews NordSpace's participation in Hannover Messe, emphasizing the importance of a Canadian supply chain and industrial partnerships. We end with a couple of fun questions about who Rahul thinks will perform at NGen’s Hannover reception, and whether he’s been screeched in yet.
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About the Making it in Ontario Podcast
Making it in Ontario is your window into what's next in manufacturing. Ontario’s economy depends on manufacturing, but the latest research reveals concerning trends that could undermine the sector’s strength—if we don’t address them. Join us as we talk to CEOs and other leaders at the forefront of the sector about productivity, strategy, talent markets and career opportunities, and the role of manufacturing in a prosperous and sustainable future.
This podcast is an initiative of the Trillium Network for Advanced Manufacturing. It is produced by Storied Places Media.
Welcome to Making it in Ontario, your window into what's next in
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:Ontario's manufacturing sector from the
data driven researchers at the Trillium
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:Network for Advanced Manufacturing.
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:I'm Michelle Samson.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And I'm Brendan Sweeney.
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:Michelle Samson: Where do we start?
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:Space is cool?
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah, space is cool.
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:This, this episode is pretty cool.
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:Space is cool.
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:It's not quite dinosaurs.
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:Dinosaurs are pretty cool too.
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:But,
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:Michelle Samson: Space is pretty up there.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Space is up there.
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:Dinosaurs is the past.
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:Space is the future.
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:And in the second episode in our
series of innovative Ontario companies
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:that are exhibiting at Hannover
Messe, we're gonna learn just how
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:cool and how important space is.
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:Michelle Samson: Our guest for this
episode is Rahul Goel, the CEO of
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:NordSpace, which is headquartered
in Markham in York Region.
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:And we're gonna talk about Rahul's
journey getting NordSpace up and
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:running, and sovereignty, and
space races, and Chris Hadfield.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And we're going to hear
about the important intersection of talent
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:and manufacturing capabilities in York
Region and in the GTA, uh, an intersection
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:and capabilities that, you know, rival
any other major metropolitan area, not
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:just in North America, but in the world.
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:Michelle Samson: And finally we're
going to, uh, speculate some more
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:about which musical act is going to be
at NGen's big reception in Hannover.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah.
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:And so we're, we're, no one will
confirm and no one will deny all these
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:kind of rumors, all this speculation
about who this musical guest is.
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:Uh, we've got Scorpions.
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:No one's confirmed or denied.
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:We've got Justin Bieber.
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:No one's confirmed or denied.
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:Michelle Samson: And now we've got Rahul
Goel's guess, which is a really good one.
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:And you're gonna have to
listen all the way to the end
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:to figure out what he thinks.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So until
someone confirms or denies, these
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:rumors, um, they're out there.
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:And with that, Michelle,
should we get to the episode?
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:Michelle Samson: We will, although I
will add one more thing, which is that
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:if, for some reason you want to make
a drinking game out of your coffee
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:while you listen to this episode, drink
every time Brendan makes a space pun.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Okay.
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:Be careful with that.
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:Michelle Samson: Uh oh, I'm
getting myself into trouble.
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:Brendan Sweeney: No, no, no, no, no.
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:I mean, be careful with the actual drink.
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:Michelle Samson: Clearly
it's time to wrap this up.
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:Here's the episode.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So, Rahul, here's one
of the things that I'm really interested
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:in, you're based in Markham, you're based
in York Region, but I understand you may
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:be spending more time in Newfoundland
than in the past, or you may be planning
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:on spending more time in Newfoundland.
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:Tell us a bit about that.
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:Rahul Goel: Definitely.
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:The Newfoundland side of our work
at NordSpace is really exciting, uh,
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:because, you know, it's exciting to be
doing something spanning all of Canada.
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:We're working on building Canada's
first sovereign space launch capability.
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:Canada has never launched, uh, into space
before, and being able to unlock that
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:access like so many other nations around
the world, this is not just something
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:that the United States and Russia, and all
do anymore, lots of countries are doing.
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:Um, that's exciting.
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:Uh, that's going to be a
key piece of infrastructure.
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:Now, of course, we're building
the actual launch vehicles, the
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:rockets that'll get us there.
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:But we have to launch them
from somewhere as well.
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:And as a very, uh, decidedly
Canadian company, it's critical
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:to us that we actually launch
from Canadian soil as well.
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:Uh, so we spent a lot of time
looking around Canada for the past
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:couple years for the ideal spot to
launch from, and ended up settling
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:on Newfoundland and specifically a
beautiful region outside the town of St.
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:Lawrence on the southeastern
shore of the province.
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:So, uh, that's going to be epic,
it's gonna be fun, it's gonna
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:be massive for the community and
the province and the country.
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:And that's our relationship
with Newfoundland.
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:And we're very proud and excited.
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:Michelle Samson: Now Rahul, I am a
native Nova Scotian, and while I love
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:our cousins in Newfoundland, I also
have to bring up and ask you about
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:Maritime Launch in Canso, Nova Scotia.
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:Uh, kind of curious, is there gonna
be a Canadian space race or are you
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:collaborating with them in any way?
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:What's the deal there?
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:Rahul Goel: Well, we're not
collaborating with them just yet.
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:I, you know, I actually started
the company because I was excited
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:about a spaceport in Canada
and we're like, okay, check.
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:We don't have to worry about that piece.
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:But, you know, these are complicated,
projects and we did explore working
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:with Maritime Launch, uh, and wish
them the best, but it wasn't exactly
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:aligned with the pace and the
business model that we were expecting.
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:So, um, I think a space race is great.
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:It'd be good.
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:We are though a tech and manufacturing
company, so we actually, you know,
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:the Spaceport is kind of a side
quest, a side project for us.
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:It enables the core capability
that we're developing.
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:Um, all our engineers and scientists
are actual rocket engineers and
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:scientists and manufacturing, and
tech development and R&D is the
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:core competency for the company.
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:Um, so the Spaceport is something
that enables our core efforts.
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:So, I love a space race.
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:I think competition is great,
and hope that ends up happening.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So NordSpace, in a
nutshell, what is NordSpace, what are
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:you doing and how did it come about?
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:Rahul Goel: Well, there isn't one
point in time I think, uh, it's hard
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:to untangle myself from the journey
and the genesis of the company.
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:But really it's the amazing team that
we have and the miracle workers, the
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:engineers and scientists, uh, on our team
who are actually doing the amazing work.
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:I just kind of do this stuff
and I'm the face of the company.
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:But the company was started by
myself, uh, about two and a half
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:years ago, almost three years ago.
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:Um, but it's been a
lifelong pursuit of mine.
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:I'm born and raised in Toronto
in the Jane and Finch area.
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:One of the things that really kept me
going throughout my entire life and got
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:me excited about being in STEM, being an
entrepreneur, and all of that was space.
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:Just the vastness of
it, the challenge of it.
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:And seeing this major gap in
Canada's space industry where we
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:have been traditionally a leader
in space, we were the third nation
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:to have a satellite in orbit.
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:Obviously not launched from
Canada, but we're the third nation
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:to have a satellite in space.
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:But we've never launched anything
to space from Canadian soil before.
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:We're the only G7 country that doesn't
have this capability or participated
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:in it, at least, behind nearly
two dozen others ranging from like
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:Scotland and Norway and New Zealand and
Australia, the UK, and so many others.
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:And we're sending, you know, our
best and brightest, our tax dollars,
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:all our potential, all our aerospace
engineers, to other nations.
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:So, um, I couldn't see
this happen, any longer.
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:It felt like we're facing another Avro
Arrow moment here in Canada, and I felt
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:that contributing to the space sector by
building Canada's first launch capability
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:would be the best thing I could do with
my passion and resources, and desire
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:to contribute to the space economy.
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:So yeah, that's what built, uh,
NordSpace, the initial phases.
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:NordSpace itself is a general space
missions company, uh, where our goal is
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:to be able to go end to end for space
missions, build small satellites in
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:house, build the rockets that'll launch
them, build a space port that'll support
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:all of that, uh, and get it to orbit.
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:So these are the three key
components of NordSpace.
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:And we're tackling all three,
obviously very challenging.
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:Michelle Samson: Rahul, I, it sounds
like you're going for speed, you
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:know, you're trying to get things up
and running as quickly as you can.
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:And it wouldn't have surprised me if
you had adopted a "move fast and break
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:things," ethos that's so common in the
tech industry, although hopefully less.
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:But, um, seems to me that you've taken
a very different approach, particularly
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:when it comes to the environment.
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:You're pioneering
sustainable fuels, right?
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:Could you tell us a little bit about
that angle of what you're doing?
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:Rahul Goel: Yeah, for sure.
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:That's a really big part of what
we're doing, um, trying to build
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:the most sustainable, most
economical way to get to space.
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:So, um, in modern times, you
know, we benefit greatly from
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:some very advanced technologies.
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:One of the key things that allows us
to do what we're doing at the pace and
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:at cost is 3D printing, and we're not
talking about, you know, plastic 3D
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:printing that you might have on your
desktop now, but we're talking about
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:large scale metal additive manufacturing,
powder bed fusion, and we use this to
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:manufacture engines and pressure vessels
and specialized aerospace components,
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:and it's really groundbreaking stuff.
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:And not having to worry about going
through very complex, conventional
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:manufacturing approaches to develop these
very intricate parts, uh, means that we
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:can invest our cycles and resources that
would traditionally be used in kind of
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:generic aerospace engineering towards
more interesting pursuits, particularly
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:in the realm of sustainability.
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:So, um, our rockets use a kerosene
and liquid oxygen based combination of
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:propellants to power our engines, and
that opens up the opportunity for us to
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:explore the use of things like sustainable
aviation fuels and carbon neutral eFuels
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:that can give us very similar performance
characteristics as our traditional
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:fuels and still get us to orbit.
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:So, uh, we're very excited
about exploring that angle.
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:Also by definition, or by design
rather, our rockets are small.
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:They're not these like space
shuttle or SpaceX, Falcon Nine,
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:definitely not Starship level.
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:They're small vehicles designed to take a
couple hundred kilos to low earth orbit.
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:So they're very low impact,
uh, on the environment.
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:An entire year of our operations
at Spaceport Canada with our launch
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:vehicles, we use less fuel than a single
747 commercial flight going from St.
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:John's to Paris.
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:People going on a vacation.
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:In exchange we get to launch
Earth observation satellites
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:that'll benefit us on Earth.
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:Wildfires, wildlife, oceans, all
of that is possible with this
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:very low impact, um, very high ROI
capability that we're developing.
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:Brendan Sweeney: So you're a Toronto
guy, and you're a U of T alum?
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:Rahul Goel: That's correct.
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:Yeah.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And so how did, um,
what did you learn at U of T, what
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:did you see at U of T that helped you
launch, pun intended, this company?
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:Rahul Goel: U of T was a great school.
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:In fact, I am back as a part-time PhD
student at the University of Toronto
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:Institute for Aerospace Studies.
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:I haven't done much yet with that,
uh, with my involvement there, but I'm
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:looking forward to doing that and being
more engaged in the next couple months.
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:So, as you can tell, I do love U of T.
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:The University of Toronto is
a great school, great
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:organization, amazing faculty.
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:I went through a program called
Engineering Science, uh, and I graduated
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:in 2016, so it's been a couple years and,
um, to be honest, I don't necessarily
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:apply the classroom knowledge on a
day-to-day basis, as much as I'd like
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:to, given my role in the company.
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:One of the reasons why I'm going back
and doing some part-time education
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:is because I wanna dust off those
cobwebs and I love kind of getting
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:into the weeds of things as well.
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:But, um, just the sheer discipline.
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:That was a very difficult
program, at least for me.
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:And, learning how to be innovative in
your approach, being highly disciplined,
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:simple skills of like not giving up, a
lot of people dropped out of that program.
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:Uh, I was grateful and lucky not to.
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:Those are things that prepared me, I
think, for a career in entrepreneurship
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:and building the businesses that I have.
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:I made a lot of great
friends and connections.
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:I spent a lot of time in extracurricular
activities, building everything
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:from rockets to robots and rovers.
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:Uh, it was a very enriching experience.
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:So, U of T was great.
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:I owe a lot of whatever success I have
in my career so far to that organization.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And then Markham is
the kind of home base for NordSpace.
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:Why Markham?
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:Why York Region?
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:Rahul Goel: Uh, well, as opposed
to some of my other ventures, which
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:might be in software and things
like that, they benefit from being
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:a little closer to the Toronto core.
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:Our company being one that's focused
on manufacturing, that's focused on
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:industrialization, capability development,
and things like that, we were looking
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:for a region in the GTA, Canada more
broadly, where we can benefit from all the
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:incredible talent that's densely populated
within the Toronto area, still tap into
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:all the industrial capabilities some
of the suburbs of Toronto have to offer.
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:Markham, we're at the intersection of
the 404 and 407, that's huge for us
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:from a commuting and transit standpoint.
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:But also so many of our key suppliers,
manufacturers, they're all pretty close by
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:because of the industrial parks, because
of the overall ecosystem York Region.
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:And I think it's a perfect junction
between the Toronto dense population,
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:and then also the space that
allows you to actually grow and
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:develop manufacturing facilities.
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:Having a 10,000 square foot manufacturing
facility in downtown Toronto will be very
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:difficult, but it's also very possible
for us to tap into that talent pool.
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:So I would say that was probably
the leading reason for us to
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:choose Markham and York Region.
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:Brendan Sweeney: And I mean, Markham
is, whether people know it or not,
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:kind of the epicenter or at least the
highest concentration of electronics
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:manufacturing in the country.
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:But you also have just, you know,
deep seated knowledge about making,
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:especially making things out of metal
and making complex geometric components
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:often for the automotive industry, but
not just for the automotive industry.
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:Rahul Goel: Yep.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Now, In addition to
the talent, in addition to, you know,
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:an industrial base with capabilities
that rival any other in metropolitan
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:conglomeration of industry I think
in maybe the world, what other
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:ecosystem supports exist that you
are tapping into or that you are
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:engaging with, whether it's, you know,
in Markham, in York Region, in the
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:Greater Toronto Area, or in Ontario?
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:Rahul Goel: I would say that
it's the concentration, again, of
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:industries and suppliers, everyone
being very close, within minutes.
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:Whether it's a sheet metal
shop, or a CNC shop, or we
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:need composites or electronics,
custom PCBs, things like that.
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:That is definitely, uh,
at the top of the list.
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:Just being able to tap into that
entire industrial base here in the
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:GTA, here in Markham, York Region.
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:That is huge and indispensable for us.
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:Uh, and then again, the proximity to
downtown Toronto and other talent centers.
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:The fact that we have so many
academic institutions within, you
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:know, a 25 kilometer, 30 kilometer
radius of us, that is also huge.
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:Most of our talent at
NordSpace are young folks.
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:Some of them are straight out of school.
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:And being able to attract these
individuals, so they don't have to
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:relocate, they graduate and they're able
to start working at NordSpace, is amazing.
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:We have, you know, at least half a dozen
incredible institutions, if not more,
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:so close to us that we can tap into.
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:Uh, in addition to that, we have a
really supportive community and, within
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:York Region, we've had everyone from,
you know, the Mayor of Markham, to
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:Minister Vic Fedeli, and many others
come by ventureLAB where I'm at right
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:now, in fact, for another company.
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:Um, these support systems and
opportunities for us to accelerate
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:the way we develop and innovate
has been indispensable as well.
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:So, uh, it's a great place to be.
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:Brendan Sweeney: You're going to
Hannover, I'm going to Hannover.
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:Seems like there's like a thousand
of us going to Hannover and NGen is
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:leading this Canadian delegation.
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:It's gonna be a blast.
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:Tell us about what we're gonna
see from NordSpace at Hannover.
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:Why are you going there?
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:What are you looking to get out of it?
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:What are you most excited about?
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:I mean, I'm just, I'm excited
to have my mind blown.
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:Rahul Goel: We can't wait.
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:It's our first year going to Hannover
and we wanted to make sure we didn't
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:miss it this year, especially because
Canada's gonna be playing a very big role.
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:Canada also has substantial manufacturing
capabilities, and just being able
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:to be a part of that is great.
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:One of the things that people often
think about when we talk about going
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:to a show like Hannover and really, I
don't know, I don't think there are many
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:like Hannover out there, but they think
that, oh, we're going there to meet
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:international partners and forge those
kinds of relationships, which is true.
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:We're very excited about that, and
Germany's a great place, and all
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:the countless nations and amazing
companies that it'll be attracting.
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:But honestly, one of the biggest
reasons we're going there
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:is to meet other Canadians.
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:It's very hard sometimes to have
a large concentration of Canadians
300
:all in the same place, ranging from
politicians to industrial leaders,
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:suppliers and partners and all of that.
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:It's funny that you have to go
all the way to Germany to do that.
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:but that is truthfully one of
the things that we're excited
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:about, and strengthening our
relationships across industry and
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:building new R&D collaborations.
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:You can expect at our booth to
see some really exciting things.
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:We'll actually be bringing
one of our rocket engines.
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:So this is a single piece in-house
3D printed, designed, clean sheet
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:designed, test fired, rocket engine.
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:Um, so that among other things, like
a scaled, large scale model of our
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:orbital class rocket, all kinds of
other interesting prototypes and
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:parts and components, um, videos and
demonstrations of our work in action.
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:So we're very excited about demonstrating
some of those things as well as
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:sharing, our R&D whether it's
turbo pumps, cryogenic systems, uh,
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:rocket engines, of course, pressure
vessels, things of that nature.
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:Um, we're also excited to be taking
part in the panel discussion that's
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:going to be hosted by York Region and
yourself, Brendan, as I understand, on
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:advanced manufacturing and highlighting
some of our capabilities, academic
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:collaborations, and demonstrating this
whole of Canada approach that we're
320
:taking with NordSpace where we're trying
really hard to build a Canadian supply
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:chain for orbital rocket development.
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:Uh, that's more important and
relevant now, today more than ever.
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:We had no idea that it would be
as important as it is today.
324
:We've always been building a Canadian
supply chain, um, that's been part of our
325
:core philosophy, but now it's critical
given the geopolitical situation.
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:And we'll also be at the World Innovation
Summit, so that's gonna be fun as well.
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:Michelle Samson: Can you get
a little bit more specific
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:on who you're hoping to meet?
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:Like, what are your gaps
in your supply chain?
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:Who would you really love to see you
show up at your booth at Hannover?
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:Rahul Goel: Well, in addition to partners
in things like composites manufacturing,
332
:larger scale additive manufacturing,
post-processing of components, testing
333
:services, things like that, I think one
of the things we're really excited about
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:is also meeting potential customers.
335
:We're at a phase now at NordSpace
where after about three years
336
:we've really refined some of our
own capabilities and products.
337
:And we're looking for great
collaborations or our own
338
:ability to join the supply chain.
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:So yes, we're building our own products,
whether they are small satellites or
340
:rocket systems and things like that,
but we're also excited to be plugged in
341
:to the broader manufacturing base that
Canada has, particularly in aerospace.
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:So finding those interesting
opportunities to sell our services
343
:and collaborate, that'll be something
that we're very excited about.
344
:Also, beyond just aerospace, uh,
whether it's in energy or other
345
:forms of advanced manufacturing.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Um, NGen is Next
Generation Manufacturing Canada, Canada's
347
:Advanced Manufacturing Supercluster.
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:They're leading this delegation.
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:Did they bring this opportunity to
you or did you bring it to them?
350
:Or how did you get tangled up with NGen?
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:Rahul Goel: NGen and being a part
of that network, uh, it was just so
352
:obviously a good thing to be a part of.
353
:Once we started gaining some
traction, we probably had half
354
:a dozen people at the same time
saying, Hey, have you heard of NGen?
355
:Are you a part of it?
356
:We had folks come by and visit
us, talk to us virtually as well.
357
:But the facility tours and all
of that are really powerful.
358
:Minister Vic Fedeli himself made sure
that we were part of NGen, and we had York
359
:Region come by and, and talk to us about
coming to Hannover and things like that.
360
:And then of course we'd heard of NGen
as well, uh, through general outreach.
361
:So it kind of just all happened at once,
coming from all directions, and you
362
:know, it was just a match made in heaven.
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:We're very grateful for that in
particular that supercluster,
364
:very relevant to, uh, what we do.
365
:So, uh, we're excited and
grateful that NGen is taking
366
:the lead on this delegation.
367
:Brendan Sweeney: So after Hannover,
for the rest of:
368
:are some of the next steps or what
are we gonna see next from NordSpace?
369
:Rahul Goel: It is going
to be a great year.
370
:I've been very excited about 2025 since
I founded the company because I knew in
371
:our third year is when we'd really have
some major breakthroughs successes, and
372
:we're very well positioned for that.
373
:There are a couple things that
get me really really excited.
374
:Um, of greatest importance
is our first launch.
375
:So we're looking forward to doing a
single engine, experimental flight
376
:later this summer from Spaceport Canada.
377
:And we have many, many layers to this.
378
:And of course, launching
the rocket will be amazing.
379
:No one's ever launched a rocket like
this in Canada before, so that's
380
:gonna be fun and that's gonna be
a huge technical accomplishment.
381
:But the fact that we're doing it and
sort of inaugurating our spaceport
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:location, that's going to be huge.
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:That's gonna be very exciting.
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:We're working very closely with Transport
Canada and the Government of Canada
385
:in an effort to achieve the first
ever commercial space launch license.
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:Um, we don't have to launch this
rocket under that framework, but
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:we're trying to front load a lot
of the regulatory effort and work
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:up the kinks with Canada's new, uh,
requirements for commercial space launch.
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:We're working very hard and taking on
a lot of that work right now to, uh,
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:prepare ourselves for our first orbital
flight a couple years down the line.
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:That launch is just gonna be beautiful.
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:It's gonna be fun.
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:It's gonna be historic.
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:Um, we have the Canadian Space
Launch Conference that we're
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:hosting on April 29th in Ottawa, the
Canada Aviation and Space Museum.
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:We've been overwhelmed by the
response, the speakers, the attendees.
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:It's gonna be great.
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:We are also working, at the same time,
on our orbital flight hardware, so that
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:means our orbital rocket engines and
most excitingly, our turbo pump systems.
400
:These are completely new technologies
for Canada, never built or integrated in
401
:this fashion ever before in this country.
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:And we're looking forward to moving
from pressure fed systems to pump
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:fed systems, uh, by the end of this
year, which, you know, on paper or
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:audibly might not sound like a big
deal, but it's a huge, huge deal.
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:And once we are able to make
those two technologies, our
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:pathway to orbit really clears up.
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:And we've got some amazingly talented
people on our team to do that.
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:And finally, the other piece
of the, you know, the trifecta,
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:the space system satellite side,
rocket systems and spaceport.
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:The space system side is something
that we're looking to kick off
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:later this year by starting
construction on our first satellite.
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:So that's going to be,
uh, good fun as well.
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:2025 is gonna be big.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Amazing.
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:So.
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:We got a fun one to finish off.
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:Rahul Goel: Sure.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Um, what we understand
is that NGen is, you know, the host
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:of this whole delegation, and they're
gonna have, you know, there's a brunch
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:and there's a couple receptions, and at
one of these there's gonna be a pretty
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:high profile surprise musical guest.
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:We've started speculating and we started
on the last week's episode of the podcast.
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:And, I mean, we're starting rumors now.
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:Might be Scorpions because
they're from Hannover.
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:Might be Justin Bieber,
real Canadian flare there.
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:Again, none of these
rumors have been confirmed.
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:None of these rumors have been denied.
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:What musical act would you
speculate that we're gonna see at
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:the big NGen reception in Hannover?
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:Who do you think is gonna be playing?
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:Rahul Goel: Oh, that's a, that sounds fun.
432
:If I, you know, there
might be a slight bias.
433
:So, um, Colonel Chris Hadfield, um,
one of Canada's most illustrious
434
:astronauts, commander of the
Space Station and all as well.
435
:So, obviously he's a great musician.
436
:He wrote the first album and sang
that in space and very excitingly,
437
:uh, he's been advising NordSpace
over the last little while as well.
438
:And that's just been one of the
best things I've ever experienced as
439
:an entrepreneur and as a Canadian.
440
:Um.
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:I hope that it's him.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Wow!
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:Rahul Goel: Uh, I think it would be
fitting and it would be very inspiring.
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:Michelle Samson: Maybe we're gonna get
an on the ground version of Space Oddity.
445
:Rahul Goel: That would be so fun.
446
:Brendan Sweeney: Good answer.
447
:Um, Michelle, are we
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:...?
Michelle Samson: One, one last question.
449
:Brendan Sweeney: Yeah?
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:Michelle Samson: Have you
been screeched in yet?
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:Rahul Goel: That is so fun.
452
:So every single mission, you know,
it's gotta have a creative name.
453
:That's how the rocket engineers and us
we stay, uh, positive and motivated,
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:by naming things in funny ways.
455
:So our first mission out in Newfoundland
is going to be called Getting Screeched
456
:In, and we have a mission patch
for it, and it's gonna be real fun.
457
:So, uh, we're close and I certainly will.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Amazing.
459
:Michelle Samson: Perfect.
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:Brendan Sweeney: Rahul, thanks so much.
461
:This was, this was just great,
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:Rahul Goel: Awesome.
463
:Yeah, it was really fun.
464
:Brendan Sweeney: We'll be in touch a
couple times, I think, in advance of
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:Hannover, and really looking forward
to moderating that panel that York
466
:Region's putting on at Hannover.
467
:It's gonna be a great time.
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:Rahul Goel: Thank you for
everything you're doing for
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:Canada, for York Region, for us.
470
:We're very excited about
meeting in Germany and looking
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:forward to everything ahead.
472
:It's going to be good.
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:Michelle Samson: New episodes of Making
it in Ontario are published weekly.
474
:Follow us now on Apple Podcasts or
Spotify to make sure you don't miss any.
475
:Making it in Ontario is an
initiative of the Trillium Network
476
:for Advanced Manufacturing.
477
:It is produced by Storied Places Media.