Firefly to buy remaining Virgin Orbit assets

Science

WASHINGTON — Firefly Aerospace has agreed to buy Virgin Orbit’s remaining assets — inventory at two company production facilities — as part of Virgin Orbit’s bankruptcy proceedings.

In June 15 filings with the federal bankruptcy court in Delaware overseeing Virgin Orbit’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings, representatives of the companies said that Firefly agreed to buy the assets that has not been sold at auction in May for $3.8 million.

The assets, designated Segment 5 in bankruptcy proceedings, are the inventory at Virgin Orbit’s two facilities in Long Beach, California. That includes engines and other components built or in production for the LauncherOne vehicles that Virgin Orbit manufactured there. It also includes two engines in storage at a Virgin Orbit test site in Mojave, California.

That inventory was not sold at a May 22 auction that disposed of most of the rest of the company’s assets. In that auction, Virgin Orbit’s Boeing 747 and related equipment was acquired by Stratolaunch, the company’s main production facility in Long Beach was sold to Rocket Lab and the Mojave test site was purchased by Launcher. A liquidation company, Inliper Acquisition LLC, bought the machinery and equipment in a second Long Beach facility.

At the time of the auction, Virgin Orbit said that it “deemed it in the best interests of the Debtors’ estates” not to sell the inventory at the Long Beach facilities. In one of the June 15 filings, a representative of Ducera Partners LLC, hired by Virgin Orbit to assist in the sale of the assets, said that Firefly made a bid for the inventory assets at the auction but at “a level that was not acceptable.”

Negotiations continued after the auction with several parties, concluding with the $3.8 million offer from Firefly. The filings did not disclose the identities of the other parties involved in the discussions for the assets.

It’s unclear what Firefly’s plans for those assets are. The company is developing its own launch vehicle, Alpha, which has flown twice; a third launch is expected in the near future for the U.S. Space Force. The company is also developing lunar landers called Blue Ghost and an orbital transfer vehicle called the Space Utility Vehicle. A Firefly spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on the filings June 16.

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