(Bloomberg) -- The lure of commercial riches in space is spurring a variety of plans to help launch all the components necessary for a fully functioning orbital economy.

The latest to enter this private-sector race is the U.K., which on Monday will announce that it plans to construct the nation’s first commercial vertical launch spaceport in northern Scotland.

The U.K. is a “geographically strategic location for launch” with its northern latitudes, and well-placed to reach polar and near-polar orbits, the UK Space Agency said. Most commercial launches today are from Florida and French Guiana, where NASA and the European Space Agency operate, respectively, due to their proximity to the equator. These offer easier access for satellites bound for geostationary orbit.

Parliament passed the Space Industry Act earlier this year, aiming to help the nation capitalize on the burgeoning commercial interest in space. Supporters say the effort will bring new jobs and billions of pounds to the U.K. economy. The government has also allocated a 50 million pounds ($66.2 million) fund to help further the industry.

“We are committed to supporting a commercial market for access to space in the U.K., and we will continue to engage with any company who seeks to operate here,” Graham Turnock, chief executive of the UK Space Agency, said in a statement.

On the other side of the Atlantic, this modern pursuit of space riches has spurred new spaceport plans across America, from Georgia to Colorado, Alaska to Guam. In Canada, a firm called Maritime Launch Services Ltd. is planning the country’s first commercial spaceport in eastern Novia Scotia, with an initial launch planned in 2021.

The launch infrastructure boom raises questions about the speed and scope of commercial activities in space. The world is likely to see thousands of new commercial satellites of all varieties in future decades, given steep declines for both launch and satellite costs. Yet it remains unclear how most satellite operators will get to space, or from where, not to mention the size of the market and how many commercial spaceports may be required.

To date, U.S. regulators have licensed 10 commercial spaceports, including Spaceport America in southern New Mexico, where Virgin Galactic plans to launch its customers—horizontally, from an aircraft—for pleasure rides into space. Billionaires Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk are also planning launch facilities in Texas for their growing space businesses.

“Europe’s first one-stop-shop for building, launching and operating satellites.”

As part of the U.K. announcement at the Farnborough Air Show, Lockheed Martin Corp. was awarded $31 million for two U.K. projects: Establishing vertical launch operations in Sutherland and a development program slated for Reading to deploy a new upper stage to deploy as many as six small satellites from a Lockheed rocket.

Orbex Ltd., a London-based firm that develops launch vehicles for small satellites, was awarded $7 million to devise a new rocket to use at the Sutherland site.

U.S. and British officials will soon begin formal talks on a deal to establish “legal and technical safeguards for sensitive U.S. space technologies to be used in the U.K.,” the UK Space Agency said. Such an agreement would make it easier for U.S. companies to launch from a British spaceport.

The U.K. produces almost half of the small satellites and about a quarter of the world’s telecommunications satellites, according to the space agency. With the new spaceport, “the U.K. will become Europe’s first one-stop-shop for building, launching and operating satellites,” the agency said.

To contact the author of this story: Justin Bachman in Dallas at jbachman2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Rovella at drovella@bloomberg.net

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