Avio

Last updated

Avio S.p.A.
Company type Public
BIT:  {{{2}}}
IndustryAerospace, Aeronautical, Defence, Space, Marine, Electronics, Energy
Predecessor Fiat Avio
Founded1908;116 years ago (1908), in Turin, Italy
Headquarters,
Italy
Key people
Ranzo Giulio (CEO)
ProductsSpace propulsion and launch vehicles
RevenueIncrease2.svg 357 million (2022) [1]
Decrease2.svg 2.2 million (2022) [1]
Decrease2.svg 1.3 million (2022) [1]
Owner Leonardo S.p.A. (30%) [1]
Number of employees
Increase2.svg 1216 (June 2023) [2]
Website avio.com

Avio S.p.A. is an Italian company operating in the aerospace sector with its head office in Colleferro [3] near Rome, Italy. Founded in 1908, it is present in Italy and abroad with different commercial offices and 10 production sites. Avio operates in:

Contents

Avio is Prime Contractor for the new European launcher Vega and sub-contractor for the Ariane program, both financed by the European Space Agency (ESA). [5]

The company is active in the field of technological research. It carries out projects in collaboration with 14 Italian and 10 foreign universities and research centres, which are aimed at the continuous improvement of product and process technologies. It also undertakes the research of solutions in order to reduce the environmental impact of aircraft engines, [6] in conformity with the objectives of consumption and emissions reduction dictated, within the European area, by the ACARE body. [7] [8]

Avio has 5 sites in Italy, France and French Guiana, and employs around 1200 people, [2] about 30% of whom work in research and development. [9]

Avio is listed on the Milan stock exchange in the Star segment: [10] in 2018 it had revenues of 388.7 million euros. [11]

History

Early 20th century

In 1908, aeronautical production was in its early stages in Turin, Italy. At that time Fiat decided to design and produce an airplane engine, the SA 8/75, derived from racing cars. The first mass-produced engine produced by Fiat was the A10. 1,070 units were created between 1914 and 1915: at this point the pioneer age had come to an end and the company decided to design and construct complete aircraft. Thus in 1916 the Società Italiana Aviazione was founded, changing its name in 1918 to Fiat Aviazione. [12]

In Turin, besides aircraft engines, and along the lines of the internal-combustion engine, Fiat diversified production with the construction in 1909 of Fiat San Giorgio for marine diesel engines, the area from which activities in the field of industrial engines for electric power generation later ensued. In Colleferro (Rome), the Bombrini Parodi-Delfino-BPD Company, established in Genoa in 1912, started manufacturing explosives and chemical products, from which the space segment originated.[ citation needed ]

The aeronautical field began in Brindisi with the SACA Company. Gradually, other companies began such as the CMASA di Marina Company in Pisa, founded in 1921 by German design engineer Claude Dornier, in collaboration with Rinaldo Piaggio and Attilio Odero.[ citation needed ]

Development of large engines and turbines

Avio were present in the development and manufacture of engines for the production of electric energy, having developed large engines for ships.[ citation needed ]

Fiat started the study of marine engines in 1903. Beginning from 1926, with engineer Giovanni Chiesa, the manufacture with engines with 750mm-diameter cylinders, the maximum diameter permitted by technologies of the time, which increased engine power up to 4,500HP. In 1971, production began on large diesel engines in Trieste, in a new factory established through a collaboration agreement with the state company IRI (Institute for Industrial Reconstruction).[ citation needed ]

Starting from the 1930s, a strategy of diversification, which derived from engines produced for ships and submarines, led Avio entering the field of railway diesel engines, while the first engines for the production of electric energy for industrial use had been experimented with in the early post-war period. The development of a gas turbine was started up through a collaboration agreement stipulated with Westinghouse in 1954. Avio's experience in this field, combined with the increased availability of methane gas, enabled the development and manufacture of several electric power generation plants in Italy and abroad.[ citation needed ]

The success of the gas turbines led to the decision to leave the segment of large diesel engines in order to focus on this. In 1973, Fiat set up the company Turbomeccanica Turbogas (TTG), focusing entirely on the Turin Company's activities in the energy sector. In 1986, Fiat Aviazione incorporated TTG, and developed the activities until 2001, when it was made over to Siemens, changing the marine and industrial activities to the development of aeroderivative turbines. [13]

Development of explosives and propellants

The BPD industrial plants were established 50 km from Rome, along the railway line for Cassino, due to the initiative of the engineer Leopoldo Parodi – Delfino, supported by Senator Giovanni Bombrini, and the resolution of the State to provide the country with an independent production capacity in the chemical field.[ citation needed ]

Situated in a poor region of Roman countryside, the town of Colleferro began around the industrial site and was elevated to a municipal district in 1935 by Royal Decree. The town grew in correlation with the production activities of BPD that, from explosives, extended to several chemical products derived for agricultural and industrial uses. The production plants developed and expanded attracting labour, and the company provided for social works.[ citation needed ]

In 1927, the BPD Test Centre started to experiment on the first rockets powered by chemical powder. After the Second World War, on the initiative of Francesco Serra di Cassano, son-in-law and successor to BPD's founder, mechanical production, which had been started up in the 1930s for munitions activities, was developed and expanded. The Test Centre intensified experimentation on propellants, beginning with the launching of multi-stage sounding rockets for research in the upper atmosphere, produced at the Salto di Quirra military firing range in Sardinia, in the early 1960s.[ citation needed ]

In 1966, following its success with the rockets, BPD entered into a contract with ELDO (forerunner of the European Space Agency – ESA) for the development and production of the apogee boost motor of the ELDO-PAS telecommunications satellite. This led to development in the field of solid-propellant motors.[ citation needed ]

In 1968, the SNIA Viscosa Company took over BPD, which became SNIA-BPD. In 1975, under this company configuration, ESA initially gave the BPD branch of SNIA the task of developing and producing the separation motors of the European Ariane satellite launcher, and in 1984, the contract for the manufacture of the Ariane 5 boosters. The Ariane take-off motors have been completed now for over twenty years at the launch site in French Guiana, under the subsidiary companies Europropulsion and Regulus, set up in 1988. [13]

In 1990, SNIA sold the BPD branch to the Gilardini Company, which was bought by Fiat Aviazione in 1994. From 1989 Fiat Aviazione became FiatAvio S.p.A. [12]

Aviation activities

Fiat took on the role of Italian prime contractor for the NATO F-104G aircraft. With the name change of the Fiat Aviazione to Fiat Avio in 1989, the company collaborated on the design and manufacture of propulsion systems for, among the others, the Panavia Tornado and Harrier in the military sector, and Boeing and Airbus in the commercial one.[ citation needed ]

In 1997, the acquisition of the controlling stake in Alfa Romeo Avio from Finmeccanica was key to a national strategic project aimed at reducing the excessive fragmentation of the Italian companies and at increasing competitiveness through more systematic synergies. [13]

From 2000 to 2011

Avio has thus been able to set out on the road of growing internationalisation, placing itself among the major world players in the field of the design and production of components and modules for aerospace propulsion. The foundation of AvioPolska in 2001, was followed in 2005 by the creation of DutchAero, with the acquisition of Phillips Aerospace. [13]

In 2003, the Fiat Group, struggling with the crisis in the automobile sector, sold Fiat Avio S.p.A. to a consortium formed by the US fund The Carlyle Group (70%), and Finmeccanica S.p.A. (30%), which beat off competition from French company Snecma. Fiat Avio was valued at the timea at €1.5 billion, and changed its name to Avio S.p.A. [14]

In August 2006, the British fund Cinven announced the acquisition of Avio S.p.A. from Carlyle for a total value of €2.57 billion. [14]

Avio S.p.A. was then held by the sole shareholder BCV Investments S.C.A., a company under Luxembourg law that was mainly owned by funds traceable to the British company Cinven Limited (85%) and a company belonging to Leonardo S.p.A. (15%). [15]

The spin-off in 2012

In December 2012, it was announced that an agreement had been signed for the acquisition by General Electric of the aeronautical division of Avio Spa. The purchase was finalized on 1 August 2013 for a cost of €3.3 billion and determined the split between Avio's space division, which continues to be owned by Cinven and Leonardo, and the company's aviation division, which took the name Avio Aero and thus became a GE Aviation business now totally unrelated to the Avio Group.[ citation needed ]

From 2012 to today

Vega launcher on the launch pad Vega and Sentinel-2 ready and waiting on the launch pad.jpg
Vega launcher on the launch pad

The Vega launcher

The main programme Avio is working on is the European Vega light-lift launcher. The rocket consists of four stages, the first three equipped with solid propellant motors and the last one using liquid propulsion. It is about 30 metres high overall, with a maximum diameter of 3 metres. The maximum load it can carry is 1,500 kg in polar orbit at an altitude of about 700 km.[ citation needed ]

The Vega's maiden flight took place in February 2012. Following the success of this first launch, the project has grown in importance and the launcher has made eighteen flights, putting various types of cargo into orbit, including numerous microsatellites for various private, institutional and government customers. With the VV04 mission, Vega put the IXV (Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle), a prototype of the European reusable Space Rider, into a sub-orbital trajectory.[ citation needed ]

Within the Vega programme, Avio is currently prime contractor for the production of the new-generation light launchers:

  • Vega C, whose qualification launch is scheduled for 2022; [16]
  • Vega E, for which preliminary study activities started up and the first tests were conducted on a prototype of the M10 liquid oxygen-methane engine at a reduced scale in 2018 [17] and a full-scale prototype in 2020. [18] The qualification launch is scheduled for 2025. [19]

Ariane 5 and Ariane 6 launchers

The Ariane programme was born in the early 1970s with the objective of building space launchers optimised for geostationary transfer orbits under the sponsorship of the ESA and the Ariane Group, which plays the role of prime contractor in this project.

Within the programme, Avio has been involved in the development and production of boosters and stage separation motors since the 1970s. Currently, for the Ariane 5 programme, it is acting as subcontractor for the development and production of the liquid-oxygen turbopump for the Vulcain 2 engine and the P230 solid-propellant engine, the booster used as the first stage in a dual configuration.

As regards the new European medium-heavy Ariane 6 launcher, Avio is responsible for the P120C solid-propellant motor (common to the first stage of the Vega C), which will act as a booster for the launcher (in dual configuration for the medium Ariane 62 version and in quadruple configuration for the heavy Ariane 64 version), and the liquid-oxygen turbopump (LOX) for the Vinci motor.

Ariane 5 at liftoff VA252 Liftoff.png
Ariane 5 at liftoff

The qualification launch of Ariane 6 is scheduled for mid-2022.

Solid-propellant propulsion systems for tactical missiles

In October 2013, Avio signed a contract with MBDA, a European consortium engaged in the construction of missiles and missile defence technologies,[14] for the design and production of the engine of the Camm ER (Common Anti-air Modular Missile Extended Range). Avio is also responsible for the engine of the Aster 30 anti-aircraft/anti-missile missile.

Other space systems

Space Rider

The Space Rider programme envisages the construction of a reusable space module launched by the Vega C launcher capable of orbiting the Earth for weeks and then re-entering the Earth's surface by landing on an airstrip. The programme, currently still in the research and development phase, is targeting 2023 for the first mission. The Space Rider programme originated at the ESA Ministerial Conference in 2014, and sees Avio in the role of Co-Prime Contractor together with Thales Alenia Space.

HERA mission

Avio will participate in the ESA's HERA mission, which foresees the study of an asteroid with the ultimate goal of developing a space defence system against possible future asteroid impacts on the Earth's surface.

Listing on the Stock Exchange

On April 1, 2017, Avio officially carried out the merger with Space2 and obtained the necessary clearance from Consob for admission to the Milan Stock Exchange. In particular, the incorporation of Avio into Space2 took place with the acquisition of 85.68% of Avio's share capital by Space2, Leonardo S.p.A. and In Orbit s.r.l.. The company subsequently took the name Avio S.p.A.

On 10 April 2017, the listing on the stock exchange took place. As a result of the transaction Leonardo Finmeccanica increased its shareholding (from 14% to about 28%); more than 40 managers also joined the shareholding structure with a stake of about 4% through the corporate vehicle InOrbit srl.

Subsidiaries, Joint-Ventures and holdings

Among others, Avio holds control or shareholdings in the following companies:

  • 70% of SpaceLab, a Joint Venture with the Italian Space Agency (ASI) for the development of new propulsion systems;
  • 60% of Regulus, a company incorporated under French law that is responsible for the loading of solid propulsion motors at the space base in French Guiana;
  • 50% of Europropulsion, a joint venture with ArianeGroup, responsible for the integration of European launchers in French Guiana;
  • 3% of shares in the French company Arianespace, European launch service provider, responsible for the sale and management of the European Vega and Ariane launchers.

Management

Giulio Ranzo has held the role of Chief Executive Officer since 2015, while Roberto Italia holds the role of Chairman of the Board of Directors.

SPTF at Perdasdefogu

Towards the beginning of 2020, the company announced the start of the construction of the Space Propulsion Test Facility at Perdasdefogu, a firing range with test bench where future liquid propellant engines will be tested.

Production and activities

The company currently operates in Italy and abroad at its headquarters in Colleferro (Rome), and has other branches in Campania (Airola in the province of Benevento), Piedmont (Rivalta in the province of Turin) and France (Metropolitan and French Guiana) with a total of about 1000 employees.

Main sectors of activities are:

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ariane 5</span> European heavy-lift space launch vehicle (1996–2023)

Ariane 5 is a retired European heavy-lift space launch vehicle developed and operated by Arianespace for the European Space Agency (ESA). It was launched from the Centre Spatial Guyanais (CSG) in French Guiana. It was used to deliver payloads into geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), low Earth orbit (LEO) or further into space. The launch vehicle had a streak of 82 consecutive successful launches between 9 April 2003 and 12 December 2017. Since 2014, Ariane 6, a direct successor system, is in development.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arianespace</span> European commercial space transportation company

Arianespace SA is a French company founded in 1980 as the world's first commercial launch service provider. It undertakes the operation and marketing of the Ariane programme. The company offers a number of different launch vehicles: the heavy-lift Ariane 6 for dual launches to geostationary transfer orbit, and the solid-fueled Vega series for lighter payloads.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hybrid-propellant rocket</span> Rocket engine that uses both liquid / gaseous and solid fuel

A hybrid-propellant rocket is a rocket with a rocket motor that uses rocket propellants in two different phases: one solid and the other either gas or liquid. The hybrid rocket concept can be traced back to the early 1930s.

A resistojet is a method of spacecraft propulsion that provides thrust by heating a typically non-reactive fluid. Heating is usually achieved by sending electricity through a resistor consisting of a hot incandescent filament, with the expanded gas expelled through a conventional nozzle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ariane 4</span> Rocket

The Ariane 4 was a European expendable launch vehicle, developed by the Centre national d'études spatiales (CNES), the French space agency, for the European Space Agency (ESA). It was manufactured by ArianeGroup and marketed by Arianespace. Since its first flight on 15 June 1988 until the final flight on 15 February 2003, it attained 113 successful launches out of 116 total launches.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vega (rocket)</span> European Space Agency launch system

Vega is an expendable launch system in use by Arianespace jointly developed by the Italian Space Agency (ASI) and the European Space Agency (ESA). Development began in 1998 and the first launch took place from the Guiana Space Centre on 13 February 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Solid rocket booster</span> Solid propellant motor used to augment the thrust of a rocket

A solid rocket booster (SRB) is a large solid propellant motor used to provide thrust in spacecraft launches from initial launch through the first ascent. Many launch vehicles, including the Atlas V, SLS and Space Shuttle, have used SRBs to give launch vehicles much of the thrust required to place the vehicle into orbit. The Space Shuttle used two Space Shuttle SRBs, which were the largest solid propellant motors ever built and the first designed for recovery and reuse. The propellant for each solid rocket motor on the Space Shuttle weighed approximately 500,000 kilograms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vulcain (rocket engine)</span> French rocket engine

Vulcain is a family of European first stage rocket engines for Ariane 5 and the future Ariane 6. Its development began in 1988 and the first flight was completed in 1996. The updated version of the engine, Vulcain 2, was first successfully flown in 2005. Both members of the family use liquid oxygen/liquid hydrogen cryogenic fuel. The new version under development for Ariane 6 will be called Vulcain 2.1.

The Future Launchers Preparatory Programme (FLPP) is a technology development and maturation programme of the European Space Agency (ESA). It develops technologies for the application in future European launch vehicles (launchers) and in upgrades to existing launch vehicles. By this it helps to reduce time, risk and cost of launcher development programmes.
Started in 2004, the programmes initial objective was to develop technologies for the Next Generation Launcher (NGL) to follow Ariane 5. With the inception of the Ariane 6 project, the focus of FLPP was shifted to a general development of new technologies for European launchers.
FLPP develops and matures technologies that are deemed promising for future application but currently do not have a sufficiently high technology readiness level (TRL) to allow a clear assessment of their performance and associated risk. Those technologies typically have an initial TRL of 3 or lower. The objective is to raise the TRL up to about 6, thus creating solutions which are proven under relevant conditions and can be integrated into development programmes with reduced cost and limited risk.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fiat Aviazione</span> Italian aircraft manufacturer

Fiat Aviazione was an Italian aircraft manufacturer, at one time part of the Fiat group, focused mainly on military aviation. After World War I, Fiat consolidated several Italian small aircraft manufacturers, like Pomilio and Ansaldo. Most famous were the Fiat biplane fighter aircraft of the 1930s, the Fiat CR.32 and the Fiat CR.42. Other notable designs were the fighters CR.20, G.50, G.55 and a bomber, the Fiat BR.20. In the 1950s, the company designed the G.91 light ground attack plane.

Bombrini-Parodi-Delfino, was a chemical company founded in 1912 by Giovanni Bombrini and Leopoldo Parodi-Delfino to produce gunpowder and explosives. Around its location in Colleferro soon grew a small town attracting manpower from the nearby farms. After World War I, BPD expanded its activities on fertilizers and cement at nearby Segni. In 1938 an explosion in the gunpowder plant killed 60 people. After World War II, BPD diversified into metalworking, textiles and chemistry. The last remaining owner, the Parodi-Delfino family, entered a joint venture with SNIA-Viscosa in 1968. SNIA's chemical division was thereafter named SNIA BPD until BPD was sold to Simmel Difesa, when it was renamed SNIA SpA.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rocket propellant</span> Chemical or mixture used as fuel for a rocket engine

Rocket propellant is the reaction mass of a rocket. This reaction mass is ejected at the highest achievable velocity from a rocket engine to produce thrust. The energy required can either come from the propellants themselves, as with a chemical rocket, or from an external source, as with ion engines.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ariane 6</span> European space launch vehicle under development

Ariane 6 is a European expendable launch system developed by ArianeGroup on behalf of the European Space Agency (ESA). It replaces the Ariane 5, as part of the Ariane launch vehicle family. The stated motivation for Ariane 6 was to halve the cost compared to Ariane 5, and increase the capacity for the number of launches per year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">P80 (rocket stage)</span> Solid-fuel first-stage rocket motor used on the ESA Vega

P80 is a solid-fuel first-stage rocket motor used on the European Space Agency Vega rocket. It was the world's largest and most powerful one-piece solid-fuel rocket engine, being replaced by the larger P120C on 13 July 2022.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liquid apogee engine</span>

A liquid apogee engine (LAE), or apogee engine, refers to a type of chemical rocket engine typically used as the main engine in a spacecraft.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liquid fly-back booster</span> Launch vehicle study

Liquid Fly-back Booster (LFBB) was a German Aerospace Center's (DLR's) project concept to develop a liquid rocket booster capable of reuse for Ariane 1 in order to significantly reduce the high cost of space transportation and increase environmental friendliness. lrb would replace the existing liquid rocket boosters, providing main thrust during the countdown. Once separated, two winged boosters would perform an atmospheric entry, go back autonomously to the French Guiana, and land horizontally on the airport like an aeroplane.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Prometheus (rocket engine)</span> Methalox spacecraft propulsion system

The Prometheus rocket engine is an ongoing European Space Agency (ESA) development effort begun in 2017 to create a reusable methane-fueled rocket engine for use on the Themis reusable rocket demonstrator and Ariane Next, the successor to Ariane 6, and possibly a version of Ariane 6 itself.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zefiro (rocket stage)</span>

Zefiro is a family of solid-fuel rocket motors developed by Avio and used on the European Space Agency Vega rocket. The name Zefiro derives from the acronym ZEro FIrst stage ROcket, conceived when this motor was intended to be used as first and second stages of San Marco program of the Italian Space Agency (ASI). After its intended use as booster was shelved the acronym was dropped and only the reference to the Greek god of the west wind Zephyrus remained.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">P120 (rocket stage)</span> Solid-fuel first-stage rocket motor

P120 is a solid-fuel first-stage rocket motor developed by Avio and ArianeGroup through the joint venture Europropulsion on behalf of European Space Agency for use on Vega C and Ariane 6.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">M10 (rocket engine)</span>

M10 is a liquid-fuel upper-stage rocket engine in development by Avio on behalf of European Space Agency for use on Vega E. The engine, initially known as LM10-MIRA, was a derivation of the existing Russian RD-0146 engine and result of a past collaboration between Avio and Chemical Automatics Design Bureau (KBKhA) ended in 2014 after the escalation of the Russo-Ukrainian conflict and consequent economic sanctions. On May 6, 2022 engine testing campaign started at Salto di Quirra, Sardinia, with consequent maiden flight on a Vega-E launcher expected by 2026 from Guiana Space Centre.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Relazione Finanziaria Annuale 2022" (PDF). Teleborsa.
  2. 1 2 "Relazione Finanziaria Semestrale al 30 giugno 2023" (PDF). Teleborsa.
  3. "Who we are". avio.com.
  4. "AVIO". Archived from the original on 26 October 2010. Retrieved 28 May 2010.
  5. "ESA Approval Paves Way for Ariane 6, Vega-Contracts". spacenews.com. 17 July 2015.
  6. "AVIO". Archived from the original on 17 September 2010. Retrieved 28 May 2010.
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 12 June 2010. Retrieved 28 May 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. [Avio Group 2009 Consolidated Financial Statements]
  9. "Avio 2018 Results: Revenue, Net Profit and Cash Growth Continues". businessinsider.com. 15 March 2019.
  10. "Avio Stock Market Summary". borsaitaliana.it.
  11. "AVIO SPA : Financial Data Forecasts Estimates and Expectations". marketscreener.com.
  12. 1 2 "AVIO". Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  13. 1 2 3 4 [La Storia futura - Stefano Musso Professor of History of Political Movements and Parties at the Faculty of Political Science, Turin University - 2008- AVIO S.p.A.]
  14. 1 2 Cessione Fiat Aviofiatgroup.com 2003 Archived 1 January 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  15. "SPACE2 Porta avio in borsa" (PDF). space2spa.com. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  16. "Vega". www.esa.int. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  17. "Successfully Tested the M10-Methane Engine Prototype | Avio". Avio.com. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  18. "First full scale M10 engine thrust chamber test firing successfully completed | Avio". Avio.com. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  19. "Vega-E". www.esa.int. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  20. "Propulsion System | Avio". Avio.com. Retrieved 21 June 2021.