A SES purchase of Intelsat will let the combined companies better compete with the "robust and growing competition" they face, particularly from non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) satellite entrants but also terrestrial connectivity, SES and Intelsat said in a docket 24-267 filing posted Friday. SES is seeking approval of license transfers as part of its proposed $3.1 billion purchase of Intelsat (see 2405310004). Combining SES' multi-orbit constellation with Intelsat's complementary suite of geostationary orbit assets and extensive ground network will give New SES a multi-band GSO fleet, a stronger medium orbit system (MEO) and a cloud-based open network architecture, they said. New SES will be better positioned to make long-term investments in satellite capacity, they said. Currently each operator on its own might have difficulty closing the business case to invest in a replacement satellite because of fragmented demand; however, New SES will have the resources, cost structure and better business case for investing in its satellite fleet. The deal also would make investment in a next-generation MEO system more likely, they said. New SES will boast a GSO/MEO constellation "with the necessary throughput, capacity, range, and latency characteristics to enable the combined company to more vigorously compete, including with well-financed [low earth orbit] competitors," they said. They said New SES can be more efficient with satellite capacity use, freeing more usable, contiguous band spectrum to provide other services. They said that since both count the U.S. government as a customer, New SES "will support national security by creating an even more reliable partner and supplier that offers a resilient, secure, highly capable, and seamless satellite network operating in multiple orbits and frequency bands."
SpaceX continues lobbying the FCC's 10th floor about how to assess short-term interference among non-geostationary orbit satellite systems. In a docket 21-456 filing Friday, it recapped a meeting with the office of Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel where it argued its technical study of spectrum sharing among NGSO systems justified using an absolute change in link availability as the interference metric. The meeting covered much of the same ground as sessions the company has had with multiple regular commissioners (see 2408150034).
Comments are due Sept. 30, replies Oct. 15 on the transfer of Intelsat's FCC licenses and authorizations to SES, said a public notice Thursday in docket 24-267. Responses to replies are due Oct. 25, the FCC Space Bureau, Wireless Bureau and Office of Engineering and Technology notice said. The license transfers are part of SES' proposed $3.1 billion purchase of Intelsat (see 2405310004).
SpaceX's Starlink will provide free, emergency messaging to all smartphones worldwide, CEO Elon Musk posted on X this week. He said the offer would apply except where a nation's regulation precluded it. "Can’t have a situation where someone dies because they forgot or were unable to pay for it," he said.
With the demand for laser-based satellite communications taking off, vendors should make scalability and terminal interoperability priorities, ABI Research blogged Wednesday. They also must try to partner with other ecosystem players to attract governments and commercial operations, it said. Satellite deployments with laser payloads in orbit are expected to grow from slightly more than 4,000 this year to 12,600 by 2027, ABI said.
The U.S. Public Interest Research Group launched an online letter-writing campaign urging that the FCC require environmental reviews for proposed satellites and constellations. Pointing to greater amounts of debris expected in the atmosphere from planned mega constellations, PIRG said the FCC should temporarily halt additional satellite low earth orbit launches until after it conducts environmental reviews for mega constellations and ends its categorical exclusion for satellites. Under the National Environmental Policy Act's categorical exclusion, an environmental assessment is needed only if the FCC determines the license could have a significant environmental impact. "The new space race doesn’t need to create massive space waste," PIRG said.
SES' O3b is pushing its formula for evaluating earlier-round and later-round non-geostationary orbit satellite systems' compatibility. In a docket 21-456 filing Friday recapping a meeting with FCC Space Bureau staffers, O3b said SpaceX's NGSO coexistence proposal (see 2408150034) would harm established services and eliminate incentives for later-round systems to coordinate with earlier-round ones. O3b said its formula ensures the highest availability links are adequately protected while allowing later-round systems to impose relative increases in unavailability that are notably higher than what has been previously suggested.
Additional conditions on Satellogic's proposed earth observation satellite service constellation (see 2403080002) are acceptable as long as they're not more burdensome than those the FCC has put on similarly situated applicants, the satellite operator said. Satellogic told the FCC Space Bureau this week it has no objection to such conditions as semi-annual reporting to the FCC on near-miss events, and mandatory reporting of loss of control of satellites at altitudes above 350 km. Earlier this month, SpaceX urged conditions on Satellogic akin to what the agency put on SpaceX's second-generation Starlink satellites. SpaceX has made similar requests regarding numerous other pending constellations (see 2301180049).
Mynaric is blaming production delays for its Condor Mk3 satellite laser communications terminal for bigger projected losses this year. It said Tuesday that owing to issues such as component supplier shortages, it was expecting 2024 losses of $55.5 million to $61 million instead of its previous forecasted $33.3 million to $44.4 million. Mynaric also said CFO Stefan Berndt von-Bulow left the company.
Phasing in regulatory fees tied to creation of the FCC's Space Bureau will mitigate some of the "rate shock" that could affect satellite operators, particularly smaller organizations, Iridium representatives told the office of Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, according to a filing posted Tuesday in docket 24-85. Iridium also lobbied that the agency adopt an alternative methodology that would base fees for satellite constellations on "units" of individual geostationary satellites and groupings of non-geostationaries, with both operating and authorized satellite systems paying regulatory fees. Iridium said that its units approach recognizes the extent to which larger systems impose greater costs on the bureau. Iridium has advocated similarly with several of the regular commissioners' offices.