Satellite operator Spacecom has been unable to reestablish
contact with Amos 5 since it went quiet early Saturday morning.
The 2013 launch of Israel's Amos 4 satellite. Israel
Aircraft Industries
Contact with the Israeli communications satellite Amos 5 was
lost on Saturday and customers are no longer receiving service, satellite
operator Spacecom announced on Saturday. Spacecom is owned by the Eurocom
Group.
Contact with the satellite was lost early Saturday morning.
Spacecom said it had been unable to reestablish contact with the satellite and
had not yet isolated the cause of the problem.
Launched in 2011, Amos 5 is in geostationary orbit over
Africa. Its coverage extends over Africa, Europe and the Middle East. It is
regarded as playing a major role in Africa’s emerging satellite services
market.
Unlike the first four Amos satellites, which were built by
the Israel Aerospace Industries, the Amos 5 satellite was built by Russian
manufacturer NPO PM.
Industry experts described the total loss of contact with
the satellite as a highly uncommon event.
The announcement comes as Eurocom is in the process of
selling Spacecom, which has been valued at 1.1 billion shekels. Eurocom owns
64.5 percent of Spacecom.
Amos 5, which brings in annual revenue of some $40 million,
has an estimated value of between $160 million and $190 million. It is insured
by an international syndicate for $158 million.
“The Company wishes to clarify, based on the preliminary
examinations it carried out, that even if there will be a ‘total loss’
(complete failure) of the satellite, this would have a negligible effect on the
equity of the company,” Spacecom said in a statement.
read more:
http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/business/1.687543
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