ORC DISPATCH · MISSION REPORT · ORC-2026-053 · CLEARED FOR EXTERNAL PUBLICATION · L. SANDHU: HAS READ EVERY WORD · THE CLIENT HAS BEEN INFORMED
MISSION REF / ORC-2026-053 · FILED 12 MAR 2026 · PUBLISHED 23 MAY 2026
The Client Returned The Quote With Amendments. This Is A Summary Of Those Amendments.
LEO Standard Retrieval · S-01 · ORC-V4 “Patience” · Feb–Mar 2026
APPROVED: M. HARGREAVES · LEGAL: L. SANDHU · NOTE: THE CLIENT IS A GOOD CLIENT. THEY ACCEPT THIS NOW. BOTH PARTIES HAVE MOVED ON.
QUOTE AMENDMENT LOG · CLIENT EDITS · ORC RESPONSES · CLICK TO EXPAND
9 AMENDMENTS · 0 ACCEPTED
The client received ORC Quote Ref. Q-2026-053-A via email on 21 January 2026. The client returned a copy of the quote via email on 24 January 2026. The copy had been annotated using the track changes function of a word processing application. The client described this as “a few small thoughts.” There were nine amendments.
The hazardous environment surcharge applies to all missions operating above 400 km due to elevated radiation exposure, micrometeorite risk, and the general operating environment of low Earth orbit. It is not optional. L. Sandhu added a footnote to the revised quote defining “hazardous environment.” The footnote is three paragraphs. The client did not query it further.
The mission duration is determined by orbital mechanics. Orbital mechanics are not determined by board meetings. Dr. Chen prepared a one-page explanation of Hohmann transfer constraints and transit time calculations at LEO altitude. The explanation was included with the rejection. The client said they had “skimmed it.” The mission took 17 days. The board meeting proceeded without an update. We understand it went [REDACTED].
The 30% non-refundable deposit reflects the cost of mission planning, vehicle allocation, and the regulatory pre-notification filings that are submitted upon contract signing. These costs are incurred before the vehicle launches. The deposit covers them. It is not a negotiating position. It is a cost recovery mechanism. L. Sandhu’s response to this amendment was [REDACTED].
All ORC vehicles are the good one. Vehicle assignment is determined by mission parameters including target altitude, object mass, required delta-v, and current deployment schedule. “Patience” was the correct vehicle for this mission at this altitude. We confirmed in our response that Patience is, in fact, the good one for this mission type. We also noted that Patience has a 100% mission success rate. The client said “fair enough.” We appreciated this.
ORC holds licence ORS/L/2011/0042. Post-mission regulatory filings must be submitted by the licensed operator. The client does not hold an ORS licence. L. Sandhu prepared a brief summary of the regulatory framework explaining why this is not optional. The summary was included with the rejection. The client said they had not realised it worked that way. We said it works that way. The regulatory documentation is included in the mission cost. It is also non-negotiable, which is not the same thing as expensive.
The 14 working day timeline reflects the actual time required to complete chain-of-custody documentation, re-entry confirmation verification, and regulatory cross-filing. ORC offered, as a counter, a preliminary mission summary within 3 working days and the full report within 14 working days. The client accepted this counter. The preliminary summary was delivered in 2 working days. The board meeting had the information it needed. This was a constructive outcome and we note it as such.
The total is not negotiable. The total reflects mission costs at standard S-01 rates. Volume discounts are available at S-03 tier. A single-object retrieval does not qualify for a volume discount. ORC is a professional organisation. We do not use emojis in commercial correspondence. We did not say this in the response. We said the total was not negotiable. L. Sandhu has seen the emoji. L. Sandhu filed the quote without comment. We are not sure whether this represents equanimity or a very deep kind of restraint.
ORC operates under ORC standard terms, which are governed by English law and reflect the specific liability framework applicable to orbital operations under ORS licence ORS/L/2011/0042. The client’s standard terms are, we assume, designed for a different type of service. L. Sandhu reviewed the client’s standard terms as attached. L. Sandhu noted that they contained a clause requiring all work to be completed within the United Kingdom. [REDACTED].
ORC offered a 45-day validity extension, with a note that vehicle availability and mission scheduling could not be guaranteed beyond that window due to operational commitments. The client accepted the 45-day extension. The client completed their procurement process in 31 days. The mission commenced within the validity window. This is the one amendment where we found a constructive middle ground, and we note that with appropriate planning, constructive middle grounds are generally available. The client has since established a framework agreement with ORC. The framework agreement did not require amendment.
END OF REPORT · ORC-2026-053 · AMENDMENTS PROPOSED: 9 · AMENDMENTS ACCEPTED: 0 · MISSION: SUCCESS · RELATIONSHIP: ONGOING