Intelsat’s Full-Year Results Come with Replacement Plans for IS-27

  • Thread starter Thread starter anilsk01
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies Replies: Replies 1
  • Views Views: Views 1,136

anilsk01

Contributor
Joined
25 Mar 2011
Messages
2,333
Reaction score
1,089
FSS operator Intelsat is already well into its plans to make up for the early February loss of the Intelsat 27 satellite (IS-27), which include shifting its satellite fleet to accommodate customer requirements and procuring a replacement spacecraft called Intelsat 27R (IS-27R).
Intelsat CEO David McGlade announced the plans as part of the operator’s 2012 full-year results. “While the failure of the launch of Intelsat 27 early this month was deeply disappointing, we are already reconfiguring our satellite fleet to accommodate customer requirements, including on our global broadband mobility infrastructure, a demonstration of the resilience and flexibility of our global satellite network,” said McGlade.
The Sea Launch Zenit-3SL rocket carrying IS-27 failed shortly after its Feb. 1 liftoff from a floating pad south of the Hawaiian Islands, resulting in the complete loss of the satellite. The launch failure ended Intelsat’s industry record of 39 consecutive successful launches, dating back to 1996. The satellite and launch were fully insured and Intelsat soon filed a claim of approximately $406 million with its insurers. The space insurance markets agree with McGlade’s assessment, projecting a loss of up to $400 million from the 1 February launch failure of the Russian-built rocket.
McGlade confirmed that a portion of the insurance proceeds would be used to fund the cost of building the IS-27R replacement satellite while excess proceeds would be used for general corporate purposes, which could include debt repayment. The customers that were signed up for IS-27 service will remain on the Intelsat 805 and Galaxy 11 satellites, which have an expected service life timeline that extends through the fourth quarter of 2017 and the third quarter of 2019, respectively.
“We plan to order a replacement satellite with a payload that addresses the specific needs of our media customers in the Americas,” McGlade said, referring to IS-27R. “We have also filed a partial loss claim with our insurers relating to the solar array anomaly on the Intelsat 19 satellite. We expect to receive approximately $82 million of insurance proceeds related to the partial loss claim in the first quarter of 2013.”
Intelsat’s next satellite launch is expected in the fourth quarter of 2014.
 
Back
Top Bottom