Eutelsat Explained

Eutelsat S.A.
Type:Société Anonyme
Traded As:
CAC Mid 60 Component
Location:Paris, France
Key People:Eva Berneke (CEO)
Industry:Communications satellite
Revenue: €1.13 billion (2022/23)[1]
Operating Income: €573 million (2022/23)
Net Income: €328 million (2022/23)
Assets: €7.41 billion (2022/23)
Equity: €3.07 billion (2022/23)

Eutelsat S.A. is a French satellite operator.[2] Providing coverage over the entire European continent, the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the Americas, it is the world's third-largest satellite operator in terms of revenues.[3]

Eutelsat's satellites are used for broadcasting nearly 7,000 television stations, of which 1,400 are in high-definition television, and 1,100 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, France. Eutelsat Communications Chief Executive Officer is currently Eva Berneke.[4]

In October 2017, Eutelsat acquired Noorsat, one of the leading satellite service providers in the Middle East, from Bahrain's Orbit Holding Group. Noorsat is the premier distributor of Eutelsat capacity in the Middle East, serving blue-chip customers and providing services for over 300 TV channels almost exclusively from Eutelsat's market-leading the Middle East and North Africa neighbourhoods at 7/8° West and 25.5° East.[5]

On 26 July 2022, Eutelsat announced a merger with LEO satellite internet operator OneWeb.[6] When the merger was completed in September 2023, the company became a subsidiary of a new entity, "Eutelsat Group".[7]

History

The European Telecommunications Satellite Organization (Eutelsat) was originally set up in 1977, by 17 European countries as an intergovernmental organisation (IGO). Its role was to develop and operate a satellite-based telecommunications infrastructure for Europe. The Convention establishing the European Telecommunications Satellite Organization Eutelsat was opened for signature in July 1982 and entered into force on 1 September 1985.[8]

In 1982, Eutelsat decided to start operations of its first TV channel (Satellite Television) on the Orbital Test Satellite (OTS) in cooperation with European Space Agency (ESA). 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 wider audiences for consumer satellite TV.

With the general liberalisation of the telecommunications sector in Europe, Eutelsat's assets, liabilities and operational activities were transferred to a private company called Eutelsat S.A. established for this purpose in July 2001.[9] The structure role and activities of the new intergovernmental organisation Eutelsat IGO evolved. According to Eutelsat IGO's amended constitution in 2016, the main purpose of Eutelsat IGO has been to ensure that Eutelsat S.A. observes the Basic Principles set forth in the Eutelsat Amended Convention entered into force in November 2002. These Basic Principles refer to public service/universal service obligations, pan European coverage by the satellite system, non-discrimination and fair competition.[10] The Executive Secretary of Eutelsat IGO participates in all meetings of the Board of Directors of Eutelsat Communications S.A. and Eutelsat S.A. as an observer to the Board (censeur).[11]

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 6 October 2005. As of 2009, the holding company owned 96.0% of Eutelsat S.A.[12]

On 31 July 2013, Eutelsat Communications announced the 100% acquisition of Satélites Mexicanos, S.A. de C.V. ("Satmex") for US$831 million in cash plus the assumption of US$311 million in Satmex debt, pending government and regulatory approvals.[13] The transaction was finalized on 2 January 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.[14]

In December 2015, the company announced a partnership[15] with Facebook to launch an internet satellite over Africa by 2016 where Facebook lease all of a satellite's high throughput Ka-band capacity, however, the satellite was destroyed during launch preparations.[16]

In December 2020, Eutelsat launched Eutelsat Konnect, a domestic broadband service targeting remote localities, in the United Kingdom with a planned subsequent launch across Europe.[17]

In July 2021, Eutelsat launched Eutelsat Quantum, the first full software-defined satellite. It will enable users, notably in the Government and Mobility markets, to actively define and shape performance and reach thanks to its software-based design.[18]

In December 2021, Eva Berneke was appointed Chief Executive Officer to replace Rodolphe Belmer. She will take up her position on 1 January 2022.[19]

In March 2022, in the context of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and growing censorship in Russia, two of the Russian packagers active on the 36°E Eutelsat satellites, NTV Plus (a subsidiary of Gazprom Media) and Trikolor, unilaterally interrupted broadcasting of 8 international news channels (BBC World, CNN, Deutsche Welle, Euronews, France 24, NHK World, RAInews 24, TV5 Monde). This interruption was denounced by the Denis Diderot Committee, made up of academics and professionals from the European audiovisual sector, which published a report and launched a petition asking for sanctions from the European Union and Eutelsat IGO against the two operators.[20] The petition is signed by all members of the Ukrainian regulatory body, the National Radio and Television Council.[21] [22]

Distribution of East European TV

Eutelsat continues to collaborate with Russian TV platforms such as NTV-Plus and Tricolor. In France, the association Denis Diderot Committee has started a petition to put pressure on the EU to get Eutelsat to drop cooperation with the Russian channels. In a press release, the association writes that it is 'paradoxical and unforgivable' that European satellites are used to broadcast Russian channels, which 'only spread the Kremlin's official state propaganda.[23]

As top manager of French Eutelsat, Danish Eva Berneke defended the strategy in a podcast interview with Techmediet Radar: "It is clear that then we would have to wave goodbye to some Russian customers, who would then move on to some Russian satellites or something else". Media spokesman Kasper Sand Kjær of the Danish Social Democrats comments this decision with: "I think everyone should decide for themselves which side you want to stand on in the story. I do not believe that one can get through the time we are in right now by saying that one is neutral".[24]

Jim Phillipoff, co-founder of the Denis Diderot Committee explained further that Eutelat's declared "neutrality" is rather dubious granted the fact that Eutelsat only offers channels on to Russian customers but not independent Russian-language broadcasts, which could help break information monopoly of the Russian state.[25] As described above, Russian customers already actively censored western channels in their broadcasts on 36°E, which made the claims of Eutelsat's neutrality even more absurd.

Services

In June 2021, Eutelsat launched Eutelsat Advance, an end-to-end managed connectivity service, including network interconnection, a management portal and APIs for service providers and their clients. Available via Eutelsat's certified network of partners, Eutelsat Advance enables service providers in Enterprise, Maritime, Aviation, Government and Telecoms to enhance their service portfolio by increasing the range of connectivity services they offer.[26]

In September 2018, Eutelsat announced Cirrus, which enabled broadcasters to deliver content to satellite and over-the-top media service. Viewers can watch content on screens, phones and tablets, access multiple programmes, record and rewind and view detailed programme information.[27]

With a global fleet of satellites and associated ground infrastructure, Eutelsat enables clients across Video, Data, Government, Fixed and Mobile Broadband markets to communicate effectively to their customers, irrespective of their location. Over 6800 television channels operated by leading media groups are broadcast by Eutelsat to one billion viewers equipped for DTH reception or connected to terrestrial networks.

Satellites

Eutelsat sells capacity on 36 satellites located in geosynchronous orbit between 139° West and 174° 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.[28]

SatelliteCOSPAR IDdata-sort-type="number" LocationLaunch VehicleRegions servedLaunchComments
Eutelsat Konnect VHTS2022-110AAriane 5 ECAEurope7 September 2022Very High Throughput Satellite. Hosting the most powerful on-board digital processor ever put in orbit.
Eutelsat 3B2014-030AZenit-3SLEurope, Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, Brazil26 May 2014Entered service in July 2014[29]
Eutelsat 5 West B2019-067AProton-M/Briz-MEurope, North Africa9 October 2019
Eutelsat 7B (Eutelsat W3D/Eutelsat 3D)2013-022AProton-M/Briz-MEurope, Middle East, Africa14 May 2013
Eutelsat 7C2019-034BAriane 5 ECAEurope, Middle East, Africa20 June 2019
Eutelsat Konnect2020-005BAriane 5 ECAEurope, Africa17 January 2020First satellite to use Thales Alenia Space's all-electric Spacebus NEO platform
Eutelsat 7 West A (Atlantic Bird 7/Nilesat-104)2011-051AZenit-3SLMiddle East, North Africa24 September 2011Formerly named Atlantic Bird 7 until March 2012
Eutelsat 8 West B (Nilesat-104B)2015-039AAriane 5 ECAAfrica, Middle East20 August 2015
Eutelsat KA-SAT 9A[30] [31] 2010-069AProton-M/Briz-MEurope26 December 2010
Eutelsat 9B (EDRS A)[32] [33] 2016-005AProton-M/Briz-MEurope, North Africa, Middle East30 January 2016
Eutelsat 10A (Eutelsat W2A)2009-016AProton-M/Briz-MEurope, Africa, Middle East3 April 2009Formerly named Eutelsat W2A until March 2012; S-band payload not yet entered into service due to an anomaly.[34] [35] [36] Solaris Mobile filed the insurance claim and should be able to offer some, but not all of the services it was planning to offer.[37] [38] [39]
Eutelsat 10B2022-157A10°EFalcon 9 Block 5North Atlantic corridor, Europe, Mediterranean basin, Middle East23 November 2022
Hot Bird 13B (Hot Bird 8)[40] 2006-032AProton-M/Briz-MEurope, North Africa, Middle East5 August 2006Formerly named Hot Bird 8 until March 2012
Hot Bird 13C (Hot Bird 9)2008-065DAriane 5 ECAEurope, Africa, Middle East20 December 2008Formerly named Hot Bird 9 until March 2012
Hot Bird 13E (Hot Bird 7A/Eurobird 9A/Eutelsat 9A)[41] 2006-007BAriane 5 ECAEurope, North Africa, Middle East11 March 2006Formerly named Eurobird 9A until March 2012; former Hot Bird 7A satellite / Eutelsat 9A
Hotbird 13F2022-134A13°EFalcon 9 Block 5Europe, North Africa, Middle East15 October 2022All-electric Eurostar Neo bus
Hotbird 13G2022-146A13°EFalcon 9 Block 5Europe, North Africa, Middle East3 November 2022All-electric Eurostar Neo bus
Eutelsat 16A (Eutelsat W3C)2011-057A Long March 3BEurope, Sub-Saharan Africa, Indian Ocean Islands7 October 2011Formerly named Eutelsat W3C until March 2012
Eutelsat 21B (Eutelsat W6A)2012-062BAriane 5 ECAEurope, Middle East, North Africa, West Africa, Central Asia10 November 2012Fully operational since 19 December 2012.[42]
Eutelsat 33C (Eurobird 1/Eutelsat 133 West A/Eutelsat 28A)[43] 2001-011AAriane 5GEurope8 March 2001Satellite is currently being redeployed at 33° 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 (Hot Bird 10/Atlantic Bird 4A/Hot Bird 13D/Eutelsat 3C)2009-008BAriane 5 ECAEurope, South-West Asia12 February 2009Formerly Hot Bird 10 and Atlantic Bird 4A[44]
Eutelsat 36A (Eutelsat W4/Eutelsat 70C)2000-028AAtlas IIIAAfrica, Russia24 May 2000Formerly named Eutelsat W4 until March 2012.
Eutelsat 36B (Eutelsat W7)2009-065AProton-M/Briz-MEurope, Africa, Middle East, Russia24 November 2009Formerly named Eutelsat W7 until March 2012
Eutelsat 36C (Ekspress AMU1)2015-082AProton-M/Briz-MRussia, Africa2015
Eutelsat 36D2024-059AFalcon 9 Block 5Europe, Africa, Russia30 March 2024Replacement for Eutelsat 36B
Eutelsat 36 West A (Atlantic Bird 1/Eutelsat 12 West A/Eutelsat 59A)2002-040AAriane 5GEurope, Middle East, Americas28 August 2002Formerly named Atlantic Bird 1 until March 2012, and Eutelsat 12 West A
Eutelsat 48D (Afghansat 1/Eutelsat W2M/Eutelsat 48B/Eutelsat 38B)2008-065BAriane 5 ECAAfghanistan, Central Asia20 December 2008Co-branded Afghansat 1. Formerly named Eutelsat 28B until January 2014, Eutelsat 48B until August 2012, W2M until March 2012.[45]
Eutelsat Quantum2021-069BAriane 5 ECA+Middle East, North Africa30 July 2021First in-orbit reprogrammable satellite
Eutelsat 65 West A2016-014AAriane 5 ECAAmericas9 March 2016
Eutelsat 70B (Eutelsat W5A)2012-069AZenit-3SLEurope, Middle East, Africa, Central Asia, South East Asia, Australia3 December 2012
Eutelsat 113 West A (Satmex 6)2006-020AAriane 5 ECAAmericas27 May 2006Formerly Satmex 6 until May 2014
Eutelsat 115 West B (Satmex 7)2015-010BFalcon 9 v1.1Americas2 March 2015
Eutelsat 117 West A (Satmex 8)2013-012AProton-M/Briz-MAmericas26 March 2013Formerly Satmex 8 until May 2014
Eutelsat 117 West B (Satmex 9)[46] 2016-038BFalcon 9 FTAmericas15 June 2016Formerly Satmex 9
Eutelsat 139 West A (Eutelsat W3A/Eutelsat 7A)2004-008AProton-M/Briz-MAmericas16 March 2004Formerly named Eutelsat W3A until March 2012, then Eutelsat 7A
Eutelsat 172B2017-027AAriane 5 ECAAsia-Pacific1 June 2017
Eutelsat 174A (Eutelsat 172A/AMC 23/GE-23)2005-052AProton-M/Briz-MAsia-Pacific29 December 2005Formerly Eutelsat 172A, and GE-23 satellite

Rented capacity

Satellitedata-sort-type="number" LocationLaunch VehicleRegions servedLaunch
Eutelsat 28E (Astra 2E)Proton-M/Briz-MEurope29 September 2013
Eutelsat 28F (Astra 2F)Ariane 5 ECAEurope28 September 2012
Eutelsat 28G (Astra 2G)Proton-M/Briz-MEurope27 December 2014
Eutelsat 53A (Ekspress AM 6)Proton-M/Briz-MEurope, Asia21 October 2014
Ekspress-AT1Proton-M/Briz-MEurope, Asia16 March 2014
Ekspress-AT2Proton-M/Briz-MEurope, Asia16 March 2014
SESAT 2Proton-M/Briz-MEurope, Americas19 October 1999

Former satellites

SatelliteCOSPAR IDdata-sort-type="number" LocationLaunch VehicleLaunchedInclinedRetiredLostComments
Eutelsat I F-1 (ECS 1)1983-058AAriane 1198319891996
Eutelsat I F-2 (ECS 2)1984-081AAriane 3198419901993
Eutelsat I F-4 (ECS 4)1987-078BAriane 3198719932002
Eutelsat I F-5 (ECS 5)1988-063BAriane 3198819942000
Eutelsat 2 F-11990-079BAriane 44LP H10199019992003
Eutelsat 2 F-21991-003BAriane 44L H10199120002005
Eutelsat 2 F-31991-083AAtlas II199120002004
Eutelsat 2 F-41992-041BAriane 44L H10199220012003
Hot Bird 1 (Eutelsat 2 F-6)1995-016BAriane 44LP H10+1995200620072012
Hot Bird 6 (Hot Bird 13A/Eutelsat 8 West C/Eutelsat 33D/Eutelsat 70D)1995-016BAtlas V 40120022016
Eutelsat 21A (Eutelsat W6/Eutelsat W3/Eutelsat 48C)1995-016BAtlas IIAS1999
Eutelsat 8 West D (Sinosat-3/Chinasat-5C/Eutelsat 3A)Long March 3A2007
Eutelsat 59A (Atlantic Bird 1/Eutelsat 12 West A/Eutelsat 36 West A)2002-040AAriane 5G20022018
Eutelsat W21998-056AAriane 44L H10-319982010
Eutelsat W3B[47] 2010-056AAriane 5 ECA20102010
Eutelsat W75 (Eurobird 10/Eurobird 4/Hot Bird 3/ABS 1B)1997-049AAriane 44LP H10-319972011Former Hot Bird 3 and Eurobird 4 satellite
Eutelsat 4A (Eurobird 4A/Eutelsat W1)2000-052AAriane 44P H10-320002012Former Eutelsat W1 satellite
Eutelsat 4B (Hot Bird 5/Eurobird 2/Arabsat 2D/Badr-2/Eutelsat 25A)1998-057AAtlas IIA19982014Formerly named Eurobird 2 until March 2012, now at 4E and called Eutelsat 4B
Eutelsat 5 West A (Atlantic Bird 3)2002-035AAriane 5G5 July 2002January 2023Formerly named Atlantic Bird 3 until March 2012, was also called Stellat 5
Eutelsat 16B (Hot Bird 4/Nilesat-103/Atlantic Bird 4/Eurobird 16)1998-013AAriane 42P H10-319982015Formerly named Eurobird 16 until March 2012; former Atlantic Bird 4 and Hot Bird 4 satellite
Eutelsat 16C (SESAT 1)2000-019AProton-K/Blok DM-2M20002018Formerly named SESAT 1 until March 2012. Operated in inclined orbit at 16° East
Eutelsat 12 West B (Atlantic Bird 2/Eutelsat 8 West A)2001-042A12.5°WAriane 44P H10-320012020Formerly named Atlantic Bird 2 until March 2012 and Eutelsat 8 West A until October 2015, when it was redeployed to 12.5° West
Eutelsat 31A (eBird 1/Eutelsat 33A/Eurobird 3)2003-043AAriane 5G20032018Formerly named Eurobird and Eutelsat 33A
Eutelsat 33B (Eutelsat W5/Eutelsat 70A/Eutelsat 25C)2002-051ADelta IV Medium+(4,2)20022015Formerly named Eutelsat W5 until March 2012; lost one of two solar panels 16 June 2008.[48] Now at 25° East and called Eutelsat 25C.
Eutelsat 115 West A (Satmex 5)1998-070AAriane 42L H10-319982015Formerly Satmex 5 until May 2014
Eutelsat 48A (Eurobird 9/Eutelsat W48/Hot Bird 2)1996-067AAtlas IIA21 November 19962017Formerly named Eutelsat W48 until March 2012; former Hot Bird 2 and Eurobird 9 satellite; operating in inclined orbit.
Eutelsat 25B (Es'hail 1)2013-044AAriane 5 ECA29 August 1998Eutelsat's share in the satellite sold to Es'hailSat in 2018.[49]

Failure of Eutelsat Satellite

SatelliteCOSPAR IDdata-sort-type="number" LocationLaunch VehicleLaunchedInclinedRetiredLostComments
Eutelsat I F-3 (ECS 3)Ariane 31985Launch Failure
Eutelsat 2 F-5Ariane 44LP H10+1994Launch Failure
Hot Bird 7Ariane 5 ECA2002Launch Failure

Future satellites

SatelliteCOSPAR IDdata-sort-type="number" LocationLaunch VehicleLaunchedInclinedRetiredLostComments
FlexsatTBATBA2026

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2022-2023 Consolidated Financial Statements . Eutelsat Communications Group . 14 September 2023.
  2. News: Eutelsat's sales fall as pandemic hits communications sector . Reuters . 10 February 2022. 10 May 2020.
  3. Web site: World Teleport Association publishes top operator rankings for 2016. Satellite Evolution Group. 22 March 2018. 9 January 2017. 29 January 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200129232405/https://www.satellite-evolution.com/single-post/2017/01/09/World-Teleport-Association-publishes-top-operator-rankings-for-2016. dead.
  4. Web site: Communications Executive Committee. Eutelsat. 2009-07-01. 2016-02-09.
  5. Web site: Eutelsat consolidates its presence in Middle East with the acquisition of Noorsat. Eutelsat. 2017-10-17. 2017-10-17. 22 June 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200622135515/https://news.eutelsat.com/pressreleases/eutelsat-consolidates-its-presence-in-middle-east-with-the-acquisition-of-noorsat-2213854. dead.
  6. Web site: Eutelsat will continue to be listed on Euronext Paris and apply for admission to standard listing on the London Stock Exchange. . Eutelsat.
  7. Web site: Eutelsat and OneWeb complete merger. Pax International. 2023-10-10. en.
  8. Web site: Convention Establishing the European Telecommunications Satellite Organization . 25 September 2017 . 20 May 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160520184219/http://www.eutelsatigo.int/en/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2014/12/E-Convention-establishing-EUTELSAT.pdf . dead .
  9. Web site: Restructuring Eutelsat igo. eutelsatigo.int. Eutelsat IGO. 2017-09-25. 19 March 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220319175859/https://www.eutelsatigo.int/en/about/restructuring/. dead.
  10. Web site: Eutelsat Amended Convention . 25 September 2017 . 20 May 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160520184221/http://www.eutelsatigo.int/en/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2014/12/E-Amended-Convention-281102.pdf . dead .
  11. Web site: Eutelsat Group Eutelsat IGO. eutelsatigo.int. Eutelsat IGO. 2017-09-25.
  12. Web site: Consolidated Financial Statements at 30 June 2009. August 29, 2009. dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110726052534/http://www.eutelsat.com/investors/pdf/ETL-consolidated-financial-statements-300609.pdf. July 26, 2011.
  13. Web site: Eutelsat's Satmex Acquisition Expands Satellite Fleet Operator's Global Reach. SpaceNews. Peter B.. de Selding. 1 August 2013.
  14. News: Eutelsat acquires Satmex. July 31, 2013. satellitemarkets.com. February 25, 2023.
  15. News: Facebook plans satellite 'in 2016'. BBC News . 5 October 2015. 16 November 2022.
  16. Web site: Breaking: Facebook satellite for Africa destroyed in SpaceX rocket blast. September 1, 2016. vanguardngr.com. February 26, 2023.
  17. News: French satellite firm looks to muscle in on Britain's broadband market. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/2020/12/13/french-satellite-firm-looks-muscle-britains-broadband-market/ . 12 January 2022 . live. Woods. Ben. The Daily Telegraph. subscription. 13 December 2020. 13 December 2020.
  18. Web site: Successful launch of Eutelsat Quantum, the first full software-defined satellite. 2021-11-15. Mynewsdesk. 31 July 2021 . en.
  19. News: Eutelsat Names Eva Berneke as Company's First Female CEO. 20 December 2021.
  20. Web site: News. Denisdiderot. 16 November 2022.
  21. Web site: Calls for sanctions on Russian pay-TV satellite platforms Tricolor and NTV+. 6 April 2022. /www.broadbandtvnews.com. 16 November 2022.
  22. https://tsn.ua/ukrayina/nacionalna-rada-pidpisala-peticiyu-komitetu-imeni-deni-didro-pro-vvedennya-sankciy-proti-dvoh-operatoriv-platnogo-tv-i-zaklikaye-mediynikiv-takozh-yiyi-pidtrimati-2030134.html Національна рада підписала петицію Комітету імені Дені Дідро про запровадженя санкцій проти двох операторів платного ТВ і закликає медійників також її підтримати, ТСН 6 April 2022
  23. Web site: Petition / Pétition .
  24. Web site: Dansk topchef om russisk censur af vestlige tv-stationer: Jeg forholder mig neutralt . 5 May 2022 .
  25. Web site: It's Time to Break into Putin's Propaganda Fortress . 2022-12-12 . KyivPost . en.
  26. Web site: Eutelsat launches Eutelsat Advance for end-to-end managed connectivity services. 2021-11-15. Mynewsdesk. 24 June 2021 . en.
  27. News: Eutelsat takes a further step in the integration of satellite into the IP ecosystem with the launch of Eutelsat Cirrus . Eutelsat . Press release . 6 September 2018 . 16 August 2021 . dead . 15 September 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180915140348/http://news.eutelsat.com/pressreleases/eutelsat-takes-a-further-step-in-the-integration-of-satellite-into-the-ip-ecosystem-with-the-launch-of-eutelsat-cirrus-2677136 .
  28. Web site: Eutelsat Americas aligns satellite . February 5, 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140522104226/http://www.eutelsat.com/home/news/press-releases/2014/press-list-container/eutelsat-americas-aligns-satelli.html. May 22, 2014.
  29. Web site: Eutelsat 3b satellite fully fire . May 27, 2014. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140810021940/http://www.eutelsat.com/home/news/press-releases/2014/press-list-container/eutelsat-3b-satellite-fully-fire.html . August 10, 2014 .
  30. Web site: de Selding. Peter B.. Russian Rocket Launches Communications Satellite. 28 December 2010. space.com. 26 October 2013.
  31. News: Ka-Sat net-dedicated spacecraft lifts off. Jonathan Amos. BBC News. 26 December 2010.
  32. Web site: Proton-M wyniósł na orbitę satelitę Eutelsat 9B - Altair Agencja Lotnicza. altair.com.pl. 2016-02-09.
  33. Web site: Nowy satelita Eutelsat trafi na orbitę w styczniu | Defence24. defence24.pl. 2016-02-09. https://web.archive.org/web/20160207125142/http://www.defence24.pl/298867,nowy-satelita-eutelsat-trafi-na-orbite-w-styczniu. 7 February 2016. dead.
  34. Web site: SES - Global Satellite Services Provider - Your Satellite Company. ses.com. 2016-02-04. 2016-02-09.
  35. Web site: Press releases - SES.com. ses-astra.com. 2016-02-09. 5 June 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110605081718/http://www.ses-astra.com/business/en/news-events/news-latest/index.php?pressRelease=%2FpressReleases%2FpressReleaseList%2F09-05-14%2Findex.php. dead.
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  38. Web site: Press releases - SES.com. ses-astra.com. 2016-02-09. 20 July 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110720105721/http://www.ses-astra.com/business/en/news-events/news-latest/index.php?pressRelease=%2FpressReleases%2FpressReleaseList%2F09-07-01-1%2Findex.php. dead.
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  40. Web site: Display: Hot Bird 8 2006-032A. NASA. 10 February 2021 . 17 March 2021.
  41. Web site: Display: 2006-007B. NASA. 2008-03-05.
  42. Web site: Paoli-Lebailly. Pascale. Eutelsat 21B satellite in full commercial service. Rapid TV News. 28 January 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121117194429/http://www.rapidtvnews.com/index.php/25024/embratel-launches-new-brazilian-satellite.html. 17 November 2012.
  43. Web site: NASA Spacecraft Details for NSSDC ID: 2006-032A. NASA. 2008-03-05.
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