Eutelsat
Public | |
Traded as | Euronext: ETL |
Industry | Satellite communication |
Founded | 1977 |
Headquarters | Paris, France |
Key people | Rodolphe Belmer (CEO) |
Website |
www |
Eutelsat S.A. is a French-based satellite provider. Providing coverage over the entire European continent, as well as the Middle East, Africa, India and significant parts of Asia and the Americas, it is one of the world's three leading satellite operators in terms of revenues.
Eutelsat's satellites are used for broadcasting 6,000 television stations, of which 600 are in HD, and 1100 radio stations to over 274 million cable and satellite homes. They also serve requirements for TV contribution services, corporate networks, mobile communications, Internet backbone connectivity and broadband access for terrestrial, maritime and in-flight applications. Eutelsat is headquartered in Paris. Eutelsat Communications Chief Executive Officer is currently Rodolphe Belmer.[1]
Its main craft have traditionally operated from four positions, each separated by three degrees at Geostationary orbit; 7, 10, 13 and 16°E; although more positions are now operated.
In December 2015, the company announced a partnership[2] with Facebook to launch an internet satellite in Africa by 2016. Facebook leased all the comany's Amos-6 satellite’s high-throughput Ka-band capacity.[3]
History
The European Telecommunications Satellite Organization (Eutelsat) was originally set up in 1977 as an intergovernmental organisation (IGO) to develop and operate a satellite-based telecommunications infrastructure for Europe. In 1982 Eutelsat decided to start operations of its first TV-channel (Sky Channel or Sky 1) on the Orbital Test Satellite (OTS) in cooperation with ESA (The European Space Agency). This was the first satellite based direct-to-home TV-channel launched in Europe. In 1983 Eutelsat launched its first satellite to be used for telecommunications and TV distribution
Initially established to address satellite telecommunications demand in Western Europe, Eutelsat rapidly developed its infrastructure to expand coverage to additional services (i.e. TV) and markets, such as Central and Eastern Europe in 1989, and the Middle East, the African continent, and large parts of Asia and the Americas from the 1990s.
Eutelsat was the first satellite operator in Europe to broadcast television channels direct-to-home. It developed its premium neighbourhood of five Hot Bird satellites in the mid-1990s to offer capacity that would be able to attract hundreds of channels to the same orbital location, appealing to widespread audiences for consumer satellite TV.
With the general liberalisation of the telecommunications sector in Europe, the IGO’s operations and activities were transferred to a private company called Eutelsat S.A. in July 2001.
In April 2005, the principal shareholders of Eutelsat S.A. grouped their investment in a new entity (Eutelsat Communications), which is now the holding company of the Group owning 95.2% of Eutelsat S.A. on October 6, 2005. Currently it owns 96.0% of Eutelsat S.A.[4]
On July 31, 2013, Eutelsat Communications announced the 100% acquisition of Satélites Mexicanos, S.A. de C.V. (“Satmex”) for $831 million in cash plus assumption of $311 million in Satmex debt, pending government and regulatory approvals.[5] The transaction was finalized on January 2, 2014. Based in Mexico, Satmex operates three satellites at contiguous positions, 113° West (Satmex 6), 114.9° West (Satmex 5) and 116.8° West (Satmex 8) that cover 90% of the population of the Americas.
Services
Video Applications | Professional Data Networks | Broadband Services |
---|---|---|
Direct broadcasting of TV and radio | Private networks | IP backbone connectivity |
Cable distribution | Data broadcasting | Virtual Private Networks |
Satellite newsgathering | Business TV, videoconferencing | Broadband Internet access on ground, at sea, in-flight |
Programme exchanges | Mobile services (messaging, positioning) | Multicasting and IP content distribution |
Satellites
Eutelsat commercializes capacity on 40 satellites located in geosynchronous orbit between 116 degrees West and 172 degrees East.
On 1 March 2012, Eutelsat changed the names of its satellites. The group's satellites mostly take the Eutelsat name, with the relevant figure for their orbital position and a letter indicating their order of arrival at that position.
On 21 May 2014, Eutelsat Americas (formerly Satmex) aligned its satellite names with the Eutelsat brand.[6]
Satellite | COSPAR id | Location | Regions served | Launch | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eutelsat 3B | 2014-030A | 3°E | Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, Brazil | 2014/05/26 | Entered service in July[7] |
Eutelsat 5 West A | 2002-035A | 5°W | Europe, Americas, Africa | 2002/07/05 | Formerly named Atlantic Bird 3 until March 2012, was also called Stellat 5 |
Eutelsat 7A | 2004-008A | 7°E | Europe, Middle East, Africa | 2004/03/16 | Formerly named Eutelsat W3A until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 7B | 2013-022A | 7°E | Europe, Middle East, Africa | 2013/05/14 | |
Eutelsat 7 West A | 2011-051A | 7°W | Middle East, North Africa | 2011/09/24 | Formerly named Atlantic Bird 7 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 8 West A | 2001-042A | 8°W | Europe, Middle East, Americas | 2001/09/25 | Formerly named Atlantic Bird 2 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 8 West B | 2015-039A | 8°W | Africa, Middle East | August 2015 | |
Eutelsat 8 West C [8] | 2002-038A | 8°W | Europe, North Africa, Middle East | 2002/08/21 | Formerly named Hot Bird 6 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat KA-SAT [9][10] | 2010-069A | 9°E | Europe | 2010/12/26 | |
Eutelsat 9B[11][12] | 2016-005A | 9°E | Europe, North Africa, Middle East | 2016/1/30 | |
Eutelsat 10A | 2009-016A | 10°E | Europe, Africa, Middle East | 2009/04/03 | Formerly named Eutelsat W2A until March 2012; S-band payload not yet entered into service due to an anomaly.[13][14][15] Solaris Mobile filed the insurance claim and should be able to offer some, but not all of the services it was planning to offer.[16][17][18] |
Eutelsat 12 West A | 2002-040A | 12.5°W | Europe, Middle East, Americas | 2002/08/28 | Formerly named Atlantic Bird 1 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat Hot Bird 13B [19] | 2001-011A | 13°E | Europe, North Africa, Middle East | 2006/08/05 | Formerly named Hot Bird 8 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat Hot Bird 13C | 2008-065D | 13°E | Europe, Africa, Middle East | 2008/12/20 | Formerly named Hot Bird 9 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 13E [20] | 2006-007B | 13°E | Europe, North Africa, Middle East | 2006/03/11 | Formerly named Eurobird 9A until March 2012; former Hot Bird 7A satellite / Eutelsat 9A |
Eutelsat 16A | 2011-057A | 16°E | Europe, Sub-Saharan Africa, Indian Ocean Islands | 2011/10/07 | Formerly named Eutelsat W3C until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 16C | 2000-019A | 16°E | Europe, North Africa, Middle East, Asia | 2000/04/18 | Formerly named SESAT 1 until March 2012; operating in inclined orbit |
Eutelsat 21B | 2012-062B | 21.5°E | Europe, Middle East, North Africa, West Africa, Central Asia | 2012/11/10 | Fully operational since 2012-12-19.[21] |
Eutelsat 25B | 2013-044A | 25.5°E | North Africa, Middle East, Central Asia | 2013 | |
Eutelsat 31A | 2003-043A | 31°E | Europe | 2003/09/27 | Formerly named Eurobird and Eutelsat 33A |
Eutelsat 33C [22] | 2001-011A | 33°E | Europe | 2001/03/08 | Satellite is currently being redeployed at 33 degrees East where it will be co-located with EUTELSAT 33B. Formerly named Eurobird 1 until March 2012 and Eutelsat 28A until July 2015 |
Eutelsat 33E | 2009-008B | 33°E | Europe, South-West Asia | 2009/02/12 | Formerly Hot Bird 10 and Atlantic Bird 4A [23] |
Eutelsat 36A | 2000-028A | 36°E | Africa, Russia | 2000/05/24 | Formerly named Eutelsat W4 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 36B | 2009-065A | 36°E | Europe, Africa, Middle East, Russia | 2009/11/24 | Formerly named Eutelsat W7 until March 2012 |
Eutelsat 36C | 2015-082A | 36°E | Russia, Africa | 2015 | |
Eutelsat 48A | 1996-067A | 48°E | Central Europe, Middle East, Central Asia | 1996/11/21 | Formerly named Eutelsat W48 until March 2012; former Hot Bird 2 and Eurobird 9 satellite; operating in inclined orbit |
Eutelsat 48D | 2008-065B | 48°E | Afghanistan, Central Asia | 2008/12/20 | Co-branded AFGHANSAT 1. Formerly named Eutelsat 28B until January 2014, Eutelsat 48B until August 2012, W2M until March 2012[24] |
Eutelsat 65 West A | 2016-014A | 65°W | Americas | 2016/03/09 | |
Eutelsat 70B | 2012-069A | 70.5°E | Europe, Middle East, Africa, Central Asia, South East Asia, Australia | 2012/12/03 | |
Eutelsat 113 West A | 2006-020A | 113°W | Americas | 2006 | Formerly Satmex 6 until May 2014 |
Eutelsat 115 West A | 1998-070A | 114.8°W | Americas | 1998 | Formerly Satmex 5 until May 2014 |
Eutelsat 115 West B | 2015-010B | 114.9°W | Americas | 2015/03/02 | |
Eutelsat 117 West A | 2013-012A | 116.8°W | Americas | 2013 | Formerly Satmex 8 until May 2014 |
Eutelsat 172A | 2005-052A | 172°E | Asia-Pacific | 2005/12/29 | Formerly the GE-23 satellite |
Eutelsat 117 West B[25] | 2016-038B | 116.8°W | Americas | 2016/06/15 | Formerly Satmex 9 |
Rented capacity
Satellite | Location | Regions served | Launch |
---|---|---|---|
EUTELSAT 28E | 28.2°E | Europe | 2013/09/29 |
EUTELSAT 28F | 28.2°E | Europe | 2012/09/28 |
EUTELSAT 28G | 28.2°E | Europe | 2014/12/27 |
Express AT1 | 56°E | Europe, Asia | 2014/03/16 |
Express AT2 | 140°E | Europe, Asia | 2014/03/16 |
SESAT 2 | 15°W | Europe, Americas | 1999/19/10 |
Telstar 12 | 53°E | Europe, North Africa, Middle East, Asia | 2003/12/29 |
Former satellites
Satellite | COSPAR id | Primary position | Launched | Inclined | Retired | Lost | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eutelsat 1F1 | 1983-058A | 13°E | 1983 | 1989 | 1996 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 1F2 | 1984-081A | 7°E | 1984 | 1990 | 1993 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 1F4 | 1987-078B | 7/13°E | 1987 | 1993 | 2002 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 1F5 | 1988-063B | 10°E | 1988 | 1994 | 2000 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 2F1 | 1990-079B | 13°E | 1990 | 1999 | 2003 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 2F2 | 1991-003B | 10°E | 1991 | 2000 | 2005 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 2F3 | 1991-083A | 16°E | 1991 | 2000 | 2004 | N/A | |
Eutelsat 2F4 | 1992-041B | 7°E | 1992 | 2001 | 2003 | N/A | |
Hot Bird 1 | 1995-016B | 13°E | 1995 | 2006 | 2007 | 2012 | |
Eutelsat W2 | 1998-056A | 16°E | 1998 | N/A | 2010 | N/A | |
Eutelsat W3B [26] | 2010-056A | 16°E | 2010 | N/A | 2010 | N/A | |
Eutelsat W75 | 1997-049A | 4°E | 1997 | N/A | 2011 | N/A | Former Hot Bird 3 and Eurobird 4 satellite |
Eurobird 4A | 2000-052A | 4°E | 2000 | N/A | 2012 | N/A | Former Eutelsat W1 satellite |
Eutelsat 4B | 1998-057A | 4°E | 1998 | 2014 | Formerly named Eurobird 2 until March 2012, now at 4E and called Eutelsat 4B | ||
Eutelsat 16B | 1998-013A | 16°E | 1998 | 2015 | N/A | Formerly named Eurobird 16 until March 2012; former Atlantic Bird 4 and Hot Bird 4 satellite | |
Eutelsat 33B | 2002-051A | 33°E | 2002 | 2015 | Formerly named Eutelsat W5 until March 2012; lost one of two solar panels June 16, 2008[27] Now at 25E and called Eutelsat 25C |
Bibliography
- (French) (English) Guy Lebègue, (trad. Robert J. Amral), « Eutelsat II: OK For West-to-East Service! », in Revue aerospatiale, n°73, November 1990.
References
- ↑ "Communications Executive Committee". Eutelsat.com. 2009-07-01. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Facebook plans satellite 'in 2016'".
- ↑ "Spacecom borrows AsiaSat-8 to cover for Amos-6 satellite lost in Falcon 9 explosion".
- ↑ (PDF) https://web.archive.org/web/20110726052534/http://www.eutelsat.com/investors/pdf/ETL-consolidated-financial-statements-300609.pdf. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 26, 2011. Retrieved August 29, 2009. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ de Selding, Peter B. (1 August 2013). "Eutelsat's Satmex Acquisition Expands Satellite Fleet Operator's Global Reach". Space News.
- ↑ "Eutelsat Americas aligns satellite". Archived from the original on May 22, 2014. Retrieved February 5, 2014.
- ↑ "Eutelsat 3b satellite fully fire". Archived from the original on August 10, 2014. Retrieved May 27, 2014.
- ↑ "NASA Spacecraft Details for NSSDC ID: 2002-038A". NASA. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ↑ de Selding, Peter B. "Russian Rocket Launches Communications Satellite". space.com. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
- ↑ Jonathan Amos (26 December 2010). "Ka-Sat net-dedicated spacecraft lifts off". BBC News.
- ↑ "Proton-M wyniósł na orbitę satelitę Eutelsat 9B - Altair Agencja Lotnicza". Altair.com.pl. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Nowy satelita Eutelsat trafi na orbitę w styczniu | DEFENCE24". Defence24.pl. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "SES - Global Satellite Services Provider - Your Satellite Company". SES.com. 2016-02-04. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Press releases - SES.com". Ses-astra.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Welcome to EchoStar Mobile Online » EchoStar Mobile" (PDF). Solarismobile.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "SES - Global Satellite Services Provider - Your Satellite Company". SES.com. 2016-02-04. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Press releases - SES.com". Ses-astra.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Welcome to EchoStar Mobile Online » EchoStar Mobile" (PDF). Solarismobile.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "NASA Spacecraft Details for NSSDC ID: 2001-011A". NASA. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ↑ "NASA Spacecraft Details for NSSDC ID: 2006-007B". NASA. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ↑ Paoli-Lebailly, Pascale. "Eutelsat 21B satellite in full commercial service". Rapid TV News. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
- ↑ "NASA Spacecraft Details for NSSDC ID: 2006-032A". NASA. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ↑ "Hot Bird 8, 9, 10 → Eutelsat Hot Bird 13B, 13C, 13D / Atlantic Bird 4A / Eutelsat 3C / Eutelat Hotbird 13D". Space.skyrocket.de. 2008-12-20. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ Julian Clover. "In orbit failure for Eutelsat W2 replacement". Broadbandtvnews.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ Mission events timeline for Falcon 9’s launch for ABS and Eutelsat Spaceflight Now Retrieved 15 June 2016.
- ↑ "Ariane Launch Report | Eutelsat declares craft total loss after propellant leak". Spaceflightnow.com. Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- ↑ "Thales Alenia Space statement concerning Eutelsat W5". Thales. 2008-09-03.