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After an unsuccessful launch on
Saturday, when the AMC-14 satellite failed to reach its orbit due to an anomaly
of the Proton Breeze M rocket, Inmarsat announced that it will suspend its
plans to ship the third Inmarsat-4F3 satellite to the launch site and said it
expected the launch to be back on line in April this year.
The announcement was made due to
fears that the same thing might happen this time. Inmarsat said that the launch
was postponed for late April “pending an investigation of the launch failure by
the International Launch Services and the Russian State Commission,” the company
said in a statement.
Although the launch of the
AMC-14 satellite, belonging to SES Americom, failed to reach its
pre-established orbit, the satellite is said to have reached a lower but stable
orbit, and remained perfectly functional. AMC-14 is an advanced Ku-band BSS
satellite optimized for Direct-to-Home video services.
The mobile satellite
communications service provider Inmarsat is concerned about the Proton rocket considering
it already failed three times in the past three years. The launch of the
Inmarsat 4-F3 satellite is meant to offer global coverage with its BGAN
broadband service.
The Inmarsat-4 satellites are
among the most sophisticated commercial communication satellites ever built,
the company said, adding that the F3 in particular will “provide incremental
opportunities for growth in (the) marine and aeronautical markets.”
The first of the Inmarsat-4 series
was launched in March 2005 and currently orbits above the Indian Ocean, while
the second one was launched in November 2005 and cover the Americas.
According to the agreement with
International Launch Services (ILS), the satellite was supposed to be launched
in March this year from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. Inmarsat had also
thought about another possibility of launching the satellite, from Cape
Canaveral, Florida in 2009, but for now, they will be waiting for the Proton
investigation to end before making a decision.
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