Administrative oversight caused Ligado to inadvertently let the license lapse for its MSAT-2 satellite, the company said in a pair of FCC International Bureau filings (see here and here) Thursday, asking for reinstatement of its license and special temporary authority to operate in the meantime. Ligado said since its original authorization lapsed in 2011, it filed requests for five years straight asking that its license be modified for an additional year, with the most recent being until Dec. 31, 2016. The company said it and its counsel are taking steps to make sure such oversight doesn't happen again, such as instituting a deadline management system.
Dish Network's stance that neither the Telephone Consumer Protection Act nor the Federal Tort Claims Act spells out injunctive relief that involves other than traditional, four-part equitable test standards is hardly radical, Dish said in a motion (in Pacer) for leave Wednesday. It asked to be able reply to the DOJ's and FTC's proposed responsive conclusions of law filed earlier this month in U.S. District Court in Springfield, Illinois, in advance of the second phase of the Dish robocall violations trial there (see 1701050045). The company said in its proposed reply that DOJ/FTC haven't contested its showing the injunction they seek would disproportionately harm the company, while harms caused by TCPA and Telemarketing Sales Rule violations "are not substantial." At most, "a modest civil penalty is warranted, because Dish's participation in the telemarketing violations was minimal" since the vast majority of the violations were by a handful of retailers, it said. The federal agencies didn't comment Thursday.
Comments on an FCC proposal to quit acting as accounting authority between earth or coast stations and ships engaged in international maritime mobile communications are due in 60 days, replies in 90 days, said a notice to be published in Friday's Federal Register. The FCC issued a second Further NPRM earlier this month (see 1701030002).
With some satellite providers having pending and forthcoming satellite and ground station license requests, the FCC should within the next 90 days issue a public notice on earth station siting and open a docket about potential aggregation interference into satellites, said the Satellite Industry Association in an ex parte meeting this week. SIA said the proposed PN about rules for siting in the 28 GHz and 37/39 GHz bands and methodology for figuring out interference zones comes as the FCC already has said it needs to refine the existing earth station requirements put forward in the spectrum frontiers report and order. It said opening a docket about aggregate interference from upper microwave fixed use services (UMFUS) in the 28 GHz bands would allow filling out the record on such issues as planned UMFUS operations and sharing approaches to protect current and future satellite operations. An ex parte filing posted Wednesday in docket 14-177 recapped a meeting between Commissioner Ajit Pai aide Brendan Carr and representatives of SIA, SpaceX and EchoStar.
The billionaire investors backing space launch ventures like SpaceX and Blue Origin "are a market distortion," attracting other investors to businesses chock full of risk and uncertainty, said Carissa Christensen, managing partner of satellite consulting firm Tauri Group, during a Transportation Research Board panel Tuesday on the commercial space industry. "Those individuals are having a very big effect." She said traditional satellite operators are a mature, stable industry attracting mainstream financial investment, but the growing boom in smallsats is attracting a new type of commercial space investor in the form of venture capitalists. The last couple of years have seen a dramatic increase in the number of VC firms getting into commercial space ventures, she said. The smallsat boom is also creating a different supply chain than traditional satellite operators have used, with a focus on building smallsats from relatively available components instead of custom parts and thus letting companies that aren't vertically integrated enter the market, said Jason Crusan, NASA director-advanced exploration systems division.
Hughes started system testing its high-capacity EchoStar XIX satellite now that it's in its permanent orbital slot at 97.1 degrees west, the company said in a media release Tuesday. The satellite will be the backbone of its forthcoming HughesNet Gen5 satellite internet service and provide coverage for much of North and Central America. EchoStar XIX launched Dec. 18 and is expected to begin operation by the end of Q1, Hughes said.
The State Department and the Commerce Department Bureau of Industry and Security transferred items, including some satellites, from U.S. Munitions List (USML) Category XV (spacecraft systems and associated equipment) to the Commerce Control List (CCL) that no longer warrant USML control. BIS’ (here) and State’s (here) final rules build upon comments received after interim final rules were published May 13, 2014, and take effect Sunday, they said in Tuesday's Federal Register.
Gogo subsidiary AC BidCo wants to add three satellites -- Galaxy 28, SES-3 and Telesat T12V -- to its earth stations aboard aircraft license. In an FCC International Bureau filing Monday, AC BidCo also said it wanted to update its license to reflect that traffic that had been carried by the AMC-3 satellite had been transferred to AMC-6. AC BidCo said the Galaxy and Telesat satellites will provide coverage of Brazil, and the SES satellite will provide North America coverage.
Satellite operators embracing high-throughput satellites (HTS) also are potentially jeopardizing the steady revenue and profit growth they enjoy from traditional fixed satellite services, S&P Global Ratings said in a news release Tuesday. S&P said satellite operators need to pursue HTS to remain competitive with fiber alternatives, but HTS will lead to a capacity oversupply that will depress pricing and that growth in the nautical and aviation markets likely isn't enough to offset. The ratings firm said growing capacity supply is leading to dropping revenue backlogs and transponder utilization rates. It said ratings on satellite companies with particular business concentrations in traditional voice and data services could be pressured for three to five years.
The deadline for comments on proposed updates to FCC Part 2 and Part 25 rules aimed at accommodating growing activity in the non-geostationary orbit sector is in 45 days, said a notice to be published in Wednesday's Federal Register, with replies due 75 days after publication. The FCC OK'd the NPRM on circulation in December (see 1612150066).