VIENNA / EuroWire / – Austria’s first commercial satellite has reached orbit after the launch of Oasis Alpha, a small spacecraft developed by Vienna-based startup Tumbleweed. The satellite lifted off on July 7 aboard SpaceX’s Transporter-17 rideshare mission from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The launch placed Austria into the commercial satellite sector after earlier Austrian roles in academic, institutional and international space projects.

Oasis Alpha flew on a Falcon 9 rocket as part of a mission carrying 81 payloads to low Earth orbit. SpaceX launched the rocket from Space Launch Complex 4E at 12:12 a.m. Pacific time. The first stage returned to a droneship in the Pacific Ocean, while the upper stage continued the payload deployment sequence.
Tumbleweed designed Oasis Alpha as a technology demonstration mission for microgravity payload services. The company built the satellite around standardized payload containers that allow customers to send small research projects into orbit. The mission reached a sun-synchronous low Earth orbit at about 590 kilometers, giving the satellite a consistent lighting environment for operations.
Commercial payloads reach orbit
The spacecraft carried payloads linked to four European organizations: Mass Balance, Delft University of Technology, the European Space Resources Innovation Centre and the Spring Institute for Forests on the Moon. Their projects use the satellite’s container system for small-scale microgravity work. Tumbleweed has presented the platform as a way for non-space organizations to place compact experiments in orbit.
Exolaunch handled launch mission management, integration and deployment services for Oasis Alpha. The German company said it deployed 49 customer satellites on Transporter-17, including 19 microsatellites and 30 cubesats. Its manifest listed Oasis Alpha for Tumbleweed among commercial, institutional and government spacecraft from several countries.
Austria expands space activity
The mission marks a commercial milestone for Austria’s space sector. Austria has supported scientific and international space work for decades, but Oasis Alpha represents the country’s first fully commercial satellite mission to enter orbit. The launch also places a young Austrian company among European startups using rideshare missions to reach low Earth orbit.
Transporter-17 was SpaceX’s seventeenth Transporter rideshare mission. The program carries satellites, hosted payloads and orbital transfer vehicles for multiple customers on a single launch. For Austria, the mission’s central result was the deployment of Oasis Alpha, a commercial satellite built to test orbital payload services from a Vienna-based operator.
