A space odyssey: Britain rockets into unknown with
OneWeb
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[July 09, 2020] By
Sam Nussey
TOKYO (Reuters) - Britain is betting that
satellite operator OneWeb will help it boldly go into a post-Brexit era.
But it faces formidable challenges to complete a working constellation
and rebuild a collapsed venture that has proved a money pit for
investors.
The British government and Indian telecoms conglomerate Bharti
Enterprises said last week they would together put up $1 billion to buy
OneWeb, which filed for bankruptcy after its biggest backer, SoftBank
Group, declined to provide fresh funding.
The deal offers a new lease of life for the venture, which was founded
by U.S. entrepreneur Greg Wyler with the vision of providing "internet
everywhere for everyone" via 648 low Earth orbit satellites.
OneWeb, which began as WorldVu in 2012, has 74 satellites already in
orbit, as it ramped up launches immediately before collapsing in late
March.
Britain is looking at adding positioning technology to new satellites to
complement and add resilience to the American GPS system, two sources
with knowledge of the matter said, after the country exited the EU's
Galileo network as a result of Brexit.
That secondary payload could be built in Britain, the sources said. The
idea of providing internet services for remote regions is also
attractive to the government.
Additional investment, potentially running to more than $1 billion - on
top of the $1 billion British/Bharti commitment - would be needed to
complete a constellation that can offer continuous service worldwide,
the sources said.
The satellites, which have a lifespan of about five years and are
assembled in a highly automated factory run with Airbus, cost in the
region of $1 million each, the sources said.
The rocket launches have run to around $70 million apiece, the sources
said, carrying 34 satellites into orbit each time.
With a smaller number of launches pushing the number of satellites
towards 200, OneWeb could begin providing coverage at the poles, with
the military and oil and gas industry seen as potential customers in the
Arctic, according to the sources.
The British government declined to comment beyond its July 3 statement
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-government-to-acquire-cutting-edge-satellite-network
announcing the deal. Bharti also declined to comment beyond its
statement https://www.bharti.com/press-release-2020-2021-uk-government-consortium-led-by-bharti-wins-bid-for-oneweb.html
then.
OneWeb declined to comment.
"Getting the future commercialization right for OneWeb will be
absolutely key," said Campbell Macfarlane, former president of OneWeb's
enterprise division who left following the bankruptcy. He said it could
prove "a very shrewd investment for the UK government".
OneWeb has secured radio spectrum and regulatory approvals needed to
operate its satellites and ground infrastructure and offer services
around the world, documents filed with a bankruptcy court in New York
show.
"This is the best beachfront property there ever was in space," one of
the sources said of the spectrum.
"OneWeb's birthing is going to be enormously painful, but in the long
run it can be very valuable."
GRAND VISION
Providing universal internet service via satellite has been a dream of
numerous tech tycoons and companies over the years, including a failed
Bill Gates-backed venture called Teledesic in the 1990s.
Wyler originally brought his idea for what would become OneWeb to Google
in 2013. Only a year later, he left Google to team up with Elon Musk's
SpaceX.
That partnership ended too and OneWeb went it alone.
Musk and SpaceX are now building a rival constellation, Starlink, while
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is also developing a space internet business -
Project Kuiper.
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A scale model of an Airbus OneWeb satellite and its solar panel are
pictured as Airbus announces annual results in Blagnac, near
Toulouse, France February 14, 2019. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File
Photo
OneWeb's parade of influential backers included Qualcomm, Airbus, Virgin Group
and eventually Japanese investor SoftBank, which pumped roughly $2 billion into
the effort.
Wyler formed a tight bond with SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son who feted him on-stage
in Tokyo in 2017 as part of his broader vision, with OneWeb aligning with
SoftBank's corporate philosophy of "information revolution - happiness for
everyone".
However the economics of universal internet service were daunting: it would be
hard to charge consumers enough to defray the cost of launching and operating
the satellites.
OneWeb was forced to step back from this grand idea and instead focus on a
commercial customer base for such services, like airlines and cruise lines,
willing to pay a premium.
The venture was hampered by costly contracts involving its own investors, four
sources said.
In 2015 it signed a long launch contract with Arianespace, majority-owned by a
joint venture of Airbus and Safran, locking in prices even as SpaceX was shaking
up market pricing in the industry.
Arianespace declined to comment. Airbus did not respond to requests for comment.
Wyler himself was sidelined from day-to-day management as business pressures
mounted, and the company cycled through three CEOs.
Wyler did not respond to a request for comment.
SoftBank was facing its own hard reckoning: a disastrous investment in
office-sharing startup WeWork was cooling investor attitudes to money-losing
ventures.
The coronavirus outbreak further undermined the business model of many of its
biggest investments and hammered OneWeb's biggest potential customers.
With SoftBank's share price tumbling, the conglomerate pulled out of funding
talks, collapsing the venture.
SoftBank declined to comment.
HOLLOWED OUT
The acquisition of OneWeb, which is British and U.S.-based, is subject to
approval from regulators including the Committee on Foreign Investment in the
United States (CFIUS).
Its new owners will need to rebuild the company's workforce after 90% of its
staff were let go following the Chapter 11 filing.
Former OneWeb engineers that helped build and run the system have been hired by
rival companies as competition for talent in the space industry heats up. A
commercial team - vital if the company is to effectively sell its capacity and
achieve profitability - will also need to be reconstituted.
It was unclear if Chief Executive Adrian Steckel, who the bankruptcy filings
show was paid a $2.25 million retention payment on March 25, two days before
OneWeb filed for Chapter 11, and Chief Financial Officer Thomas Whayne, who was
paid $1 million on the same day, will continue to run the company after a
takeover.
Steckel and Whayne did not respond to requests for comment.
(Reporting by Sam Nussey in Tokyo and Kate Holton in London; Editing by Jonathan
Weber and Pravin Char)
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