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Rescue of Iridium's 66 satellites at $5 billion (fwd)

  • 1.  Rescue of Iridium's 66 satellites at $5 billion (fwd)

    Posted 04-05-2000 19:19
    ---------- Forwarded message ----------
    Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2000 14:56:33 -0400 (EDT)
    From: Tak Utsumi <utsumi@fpwww.friends-partners.org>
    To: Undisclosed recipients: ;
    Subject: Rescue of Iridium's 66 satellites at $5 billion

    <<April 5, 2000>>

    Gary Garriott <garyg@vita.org>

    John Shakespeare <john.shakespeare@js.pentagon.mil>

    Dr. Joseph N. Pelton <ecjpelton@aol.com>

    Peter T. Knight <ptknight@attglobal.net>

    Steve Tom <stethen@teleportconsulting.com>

    Peter Marshall <pminhindon@aol.com>

    Jim Casey <jcasey@ifc.org>

    Jim Casey <caseyja@gtlaw.com>

    Demetri Heliotis <jheaps@fcc.gov>

    Ms. Irene Flanner <iflanner@fcc.gov>

    Mr. Tony Trujillo <tony.trujillo@intelsat.int>

    Mr. Myron Nordquist <myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov>

    D.K. Sachdev <dksachdev@worldspace.com>

    Gracia Hillman <ghillman@worldspace.org>

    John Mack <jlmack@erols.com>



    Dear Gary:
    ==========

    (1) Many thanks for your msg (ATTACHMENT I).

    At your suggestion, I am distributing this msg to our list.

    (2) ATTACHMENT II to VIII are copies of our correspondences with Peter
    Knight and Joe Pelton for your reference.

    (3) Commander Shakespeare's $3 million/month is lot less than Pelton's $200
    million/year (ATTACHMENT VI).

    (4) I think that your idea of convening a day workshop in D.C. how to rescue
    Iridium's 66 low-earth orbiting (LEO) satellites (which was constructed
    with $5 billion) may be worthwhile. Pls talk about the workshop with
    Joe Pelton, if you decide to have it.

    (5) The key is if the satellite can be used for narrow-band (and preferably
    for broadband) Internet -- e.g., for our Global University System with
    global broadband Internet -- see;
    <http://www.friends-partners.org/GLOSAS/Global_University/Global%20University%20System/Synopsis_11-5-99.html>, and also;
    <http://www.friends-partners.org/GLOSAS/Tampere_Conference/Global_Broadband_Internet/Global_Broadband_Internet.html>

    (6) Your Warn and Recovery Net (WARN)" system has already been using a
    couple of LEO satellites for humanitarian purposes --<http://www.informatics.org/clarke/projects.html>.

    If we use them as your system, we may not need high maintenance cost
    either. Also, if some of those satellites fall back to earth, so be it,
    and find out the way to provide similar service with geo-synchronous
    earth orbiting (GEO) satellites.

    (7) If we find a way to rescue them, Motorola will not need to waste $70
    million to dismantle them, -- or better yet, we may ask Motorola to
    donate the $70 million for our administering the satellites for our
    humanitarian projects. Their earth stations with satellite tracking
    devices (for which deployment Motorola must have spent substantial
    money) will also not need to be dismantled either and be used for our
    purposes.

    We may of course need to modify their transceivers from analog
    audio to digital Internet. I suppose that their satellites and
    earth station dish antennas can be re-used. After all, satellites
    are theoretically just reflectors/mirrors of electromagnetic
    signals.

    (8) At the workshop, we may also need to find out a way how to intervene the
    bankruptcy court decision -- at least to postpone their dismantling
    until we find necessary funds to administer them.

    Dear Myron:
    ===========

    Is it possible to get help from Senator Burns and Senator Inouye
    on this?

    (9) If this will succeed, the satellites could be a part of our proposed
    Global Service Trust Fund (GSTF) -- see;

    <http://www.informatics.org/clarke/projects.html>, and

    <http://www.friends-partners.org/GLOSAS/Tampere_Conference/GSTF/Synopsis_2-15-00.html>.

    Dear Electronic Colleagues:
    ===========================

    (10) Gary and I welcome your comments and suggestions -- better yet, any
    funds or info for the funds for this project.

    Dear Jim Casey at International Finance Corporation (IFC):
    ==========================================================

    Is there any possibility to divert some of $100 million you
    received from Japanese SoftBank recently?

    Pls feel free to forward this msg to other appropriate lists.


    Best, Tak
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT I

    From: Gary Garriott <garyg@vita.org>
    To: "'Tak Utsumi'" <utsumi@friends-partners.org>
    Subject: FW: Iridium
    Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2000 09:07:47 -0400

    Hi Tak,

    I wonder if you remember the message you sent me suggesting that VITA look
    into a sort of 'rescue mission' for Iridium. Well, I took your advice to heart
    and it appears that such is possible if we can find someone with about $3
    million/month to run it! I will try to find out what current revenues are
    like on a monthly basis and send that along.

    If you could, please run this on your list and see if there is any interest
    from anybody. There are lots of humanitarian users who will benefit if Iridium
    can stay up there!

    Thanks for your interest,

    Gary

    Gary Garriott
    Director Informatics
    VITA
    (Volunteers in Technical Assistance)
    http://www.vita.org
    ========================================

    -----Original Message-----
    From: john.shakespeare@js.pentagon.mil [SMTP:john.shakespeare@js.pentagon.mil]
    Sent: Tuesday, April 04, 2000 4:26 PM
    To: garyg@vita.org
    Subject: RE: Iridium

    Mr Garriott,
    A rescue mission runs in excess of 3M/month, we're not prepared to shoulder
    that burden. The constellation may yet have a patron, otherwise, I believe
    Motorola would have already turned it off. If you know of any parties
    withpockets deep enough, contact myself or a Motorola representative as soon
    as possible; time is in fact running out.

    Yours,
    John Shakespeare
    ========================================

    -----Original Message-----
    From: Gary Garriott [mailto:garyg@vita.org]
    Sent: Tuesday, April 04, 2000 8:37 AM
    To: 'shakesja@js.pentagon.mil'
    Subject: Iridium

    Dear Commander Shakespeare:

    You may recall that we had a chat at the SSPI meeting back on March 22. I
    left a voicemail for you yesterday.

    Since then and the announcement that Motorola might de-orbit all the
    satellites, VITA has received a lot of email regarding whether we might
    coordinate 'a rescue mission' that would keep the system alive for
    humanitarian purposes. All of the scenarios I have seen thus far certainly
    include the military (and I remember you mentioning that the military
    gateway in Hawaii alone is worth $150 million). I have spoken with a number of
    people at both Iridium and Motorola (and DLJ) but haven't quite landed the
    righrt individuals. If nothing else, it would be interesting to hold a day-long meeting so that the issues and possible scenarios, if any, could be
    hammered out.

    I have managed to get some political-level interest. For example,
    Ex-astronaut Mae Jemison is interested (she is a good friend of VITA's) and I
    believe Jesse Jackson is also having a look at the system as it might
    pertain to Africa. One of the emails attached is by Joe Pelton.

    If you see any way we could work together, please let me know.

    Gary Garriott
    Director Informatics
    VITA
    (Volunteers in Technical Assistance)
    http://www.vita.org
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT II

    Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 09:18:44 -0500
    From: "Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D." <utsumi@columbia.edu>
    To: Joe Pelton <ecjpelton@aol.com>
    CC: Peter Knight <ptknight@attglobal.net>, David Johnson <daj@utk.edu>,
    Tapio Varis <tapio.varis@uta.fi>,
    Myron Nordquist <myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov>,
    Lane Smith <lasmith@usaid.gov>
    Subject: GSTF

    Dear Joe:

    (1) Pls read
    <http://abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/CuttingEdge/cuttingedge000317.html>.

    (2) Iridium with 66 satellites goes out which spent $5 billion.

    (3) I wonder if those satellites can be used for broadband Internet.

    (4) If so, can you ask someone at Motorola if they can donate them to GSTF at
    your CITI?

    (5) We don't need to use them as they envisioned, i.e., interlinking
    among those satellites. We may be able to use them individually for
    linking point-to-point (e.g., between the University of
    Tennessee/Knoxville and Manaus, Amazon, Brazil, etc.) broadband Internet
    connections.

    Best, Tak
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT III

    Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 10:01:37 -0500
    From: "Peter T. Knight" <ptknight@attglobal.net>
    To: utsumi@columbia.edu
    CC: Joe Pelton <ecjpelton@aol.com>, David Johnson <daj@utk.edu>,
    Tapio Varis <tapio.varis@uta.fi>,
    Myron Nordquist <myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov>,
    Lane Smith <lasmith@usaid.gov>
    Subject: Re: GSTF

    Tak you prepared to keep them up there, pay the operating costs, and put new
    ones up when they fall down, as they do regularly due to low orbit? If it
    cost nothing to keep them there, they wouldn't be burning them up. It costs a
    fortune to keep this system functionning, which is why no buyers stepped up to
    the table.

    Peter
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT IV

    Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 10:52:55 -0500
    From: "Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D." <utsumi@columbia.edu>
    To: ptknight@attglobal.net
    CC: Joe Pelton <ecjpelton@aol.com>, David Johnson <daj@utk.edu>,
    Tapio Varis <tapio.varis@uta.fi>,
    Myron Nordquist <myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov>,
    Lane Smith <lasmith@usaid.gov>
    Subject: Re: GSTF

    Dear Peter:

    (1) I am not proposing to use them as they envisioned -- the way they want to
    use the satellites is certainly costly as you pointed out.

    (2) Satellite transponder is theoretically a mirror to reflect electronic
    waves uplinked from an earth station.

    My first question to Joe was if the transponder can handle broadband Internet.

    (3) We may not use all of those satellites -- some of them may fall down to
    burn up -- and so be it.

    (4) What we would next need would be up- and down-linking earth stations.
    Since they are low-orbiting satellites, the stations may need tracking devices
    -- as Columbia University's dish antenna is tracking Russian satellite.

    BTW, VITA's WARN project (one of CITI's adopted projects besides our GSTF)
    uses LEO, too.

    Best, Tak
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT V

    Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 11:41:37 -0500
    From: "Peter T. Knight" <ptknight@attglobal.net>
    To: utsumi@columbia.edu
    CC: Joe Pelton <ecjpelton@aol.com>, David Johnson <daj@utk.edu>,
    Tapio Varis <tapio.varis@uta.fi>,
    Myron Nordquist <myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov>,
    Lane Smith <lasmith@usaid.gov>, Uri Bar-Zemer <uri@ids.net>
    Subject: Re: GSTF

    Well, I'll leave that to the experts. You can always ask! I think they pay
    something to keep them in the slots they occupy (a lot of them). I'll see
    what Uri knows about the costs.

    Peter
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT VI

    From: Ecjpelton@aol.com
    Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 20:58:31 EST
    Subject: Re: GSTF
    To: ptknight@attglobal.net, utsumi@columbia.edu
    CC: daj@utk.edu, tapio.varis@uta.fi, myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov,
    lasmith@usaid.gov

    Dear Tak, Peter et al: The cost of operating the Iridium system per year is
    indeed in the range of $200 million. It will cost $70 million to simply
    abandon and deorbit the satellites. Motorola will actually realize a third of
    their $2 billion investment by simply abandoning the satellites and thus it
    not easy to change the title to anyone else as I explained on National Public
    Radio on Wednesday. Conny Kullman and other key officials at INTELSAT are
    away in Africa until the end of March. More later. Joe Pelton
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT VII

    Date: Sat, 18 Mar 2000 21:56:55 -0500
    From: "Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D." <utsumi@columbia.edu>
    To: Ecjpelton@aol.com
    CC: ptknight@attglobal.net, daj@utk.edu, tapio.varis@uta.fi,
    myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov, lasmith@usaid.gov
    Subject: Re: GSTF

    Dear Joe:

    (1) Many thanks for your reply.

    (2) We don't need to use their satellites in the same way so that we don't
    need to have $200 million to operate them.

    (3) Their satellites are already up in the low earth orbit, ready to receive
    signals from earth stations. If they will stay up on the orbit, Motorola can
    save $70 million.

    (4) They must already have earth stations with tracking devices which will
    also be discarded.

    (5) Therefore, it would be just a matter of if the satellites can be used for
    broadband Internet, and if their titles can be changed -- with some tax
    exemptions to Motorola and other financiers.

    Best, Tak
    ****************************************
    ATTACHMENT VIII

    From: Ecjpelton@aol.com
    Date: Mon, 20 Mar 2000 11:12:12 EST
    Subject: Re: GSTF
    To: utsumi@columbia.edu
    CC: ptknight@attglobal.net, daj@utk.edu, tapio.varis@uta.fi,
    myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov, lasmith@usaid.gov

    Dear Tak: The bankruptcy judge has apparently given authorization to Iridium
    to dismantle their system and thus I am afraid that this is a moot question at
    this point. It is unfortunate that more thought was not given to innovative
    and humanitarian uses that might have been made of at least some of the
    satellites, but in conversations with Robert Kinzie, former chairman of the
    board of Iridium there is no way that they will change their course of action.
    Sincerely, Joe Pelton
    ****************************************
    List of Distribution

    Gary Garriott
    Director, Informatics
    Volunteers in Technical Assistance (VITA)
    1600 Wilson Blvd., Suite 500
    P.O. Box 12438
    Arlington, VA 22209-8438
    703-276-1800 X19
    Fax: 703-243-1865
    garyg@vita.org
    vita@vita.org
    ECONET: VITA
    Telex: 440192 VITAUI
    Cable: VITAINC
    www.vita.org/satvitpo.htm -- Press release on Consorcio SAT/SatelLife/VITA
    www.vita.org/consort.htm -- Press release on satellite-users coalition
    www.vita.org/slife.htm -- Press release on SatelLife-V

    John Shakespeare
    john.shakespeare@js.pentagon.mil

    Dr. Joseph N. Pelton
    Senior Research Scientist
    Institute for Applied Space Research, Rm 340
    George Washington University
    2033 K Street, N.W.
    Washington, D.C. 20052
    202-994-5507
    Fax: 202-994-5505
    ecjpelton@aol.com
    jpelton@seas.gwu.edu
    Or,
    Acting Executive Director of CITI
    Vice-Chair of the Arthur C. Clarke Foundation of the U.S. (ACCFUS)
    Arthur C. Clark Institute for Telecommunication and Information (CITI)
    4025 40th Street North
    Arlington, VA 22207
    (703) 536-6985
    ecjpelton@aol.com
    http://www.informatics.org/clarke/index.html
    http://www.informatics.org/clarke/projects.

    Peter T. Knight
    Knight, Moore - Telematics for Education and Development
    Communications Development Incorporated (CDI)
    Strategy, Policy, Design, Implementation, Evaluation
    1825 Eye Street, NW, Suite 1075
    Washington, DC 20006, USA
    Tel: 1-202-775-2132 (secretary), 1-202-721-0348 (direct)
    Fax: 1-202-775-2135 (office), 1-202-362-8482 (home)
    ptknight@attglobal.net
    webmail: ptknight@netscape.net
    http://www.knight-moore.com
    http://www.cdinet.com
    IP for CU-SeeMe: 198.77.80.46
    http://www.knight-moore.com/projects/GSTF.html -- about GSTF

    Steve Tom
    President
    Teleportconsulting
    (703) 548-7749
    Page: 1-800-206-1671
    Fax: (703) 548-2428
    stethen@teleportconsulting.com
    stephen_tom@teleportconsulting.com

    Peter Marshall
    Non-Executive Director
    GlobeCast
    A France Telecom Company
    GlobeCast Northern Europe Ltd.
    200 Gray's Inn Road
    London WC1X 8XZ
    England
    Tel: +44 (0) 171430 4400 Direct: +44 (0) 1747 820409
    Fax: +44 (0) 171430 4321
    email: pminhindon@aol.com

    Mr. Jim Casey
    Knowledge Management Officer
    Technical and Environment Department
    International Finance Corporation (IFC)
    2121 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
    Washington, DC 20433 USA.
    (202) 473-3172 - Voice
    (202) 974-4800 - Fax
    jcasey@ifc.org

    Jim Casey
    American Indian telecommunications law.
    caseyja@gtlaw.com

    Demetri Heliotis
    Federal Communications Commission
    1919 M Street, N.W.
    Washington DC 20554
    202-418-1463
    jheaps@fcc.gov

    Ms. Irene Flanner
    Universal Service Fund
    Federal Communications Commission
    Washington, D.C. 20554
    202-418-7383
    iflanner@fcc.gov

    Mr. Tony Trujillo
    Director
    Public Information
    INTELSAT
    3400 International Drive, N.W.
    Washington, D.C. 20008-3098
    202-944-7835
    Cellular: 301-910-8393
    tony.trujillo@intelsat.int

    Mr. Myron Nordquist
    Legislative Counsel
    U.S. Senator Conrad Burns' Office
    187 Dirksen Senate Building
    Washington, D.C. 20510-2603
    202-224-6808
    Fax: 202-224-8594
    Cell: 301-646-8153
    myron_nordquist@burns.senate.gov
    http://www.senate.gov/~burns/
    804-924-7573 -- at the U. of VA.
    Fax: 804-982-2622 -- at the U. of VA.

    D.K. Sachdev
    Senior Vice President
    Engineering & Operations
    Worldspace Corporation
    2400 N Street, NW
    Washington, D.C. 20037 USA
    Tel: 202 969 6000
    Direct: 202 969 6210
    Fax: 202 969 6003
    dksachdev@worldspace.com

    Gracia Hillman
    President
    WorldSpace Foundation
    1730 Rhode Island Avenue, N.W. Suite 1200
    Washington, D.C. 20036 USA
    Phone(01)(202)861-2261
    Fax(01)(202)861-6407
    ghillman@worldspace.org
    Communications@worldspace.org
    http://www.worldspace.org/

    John Mack
    WorldSpace Foundation
    jlmack@erols.com
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    * Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D., P.E., Chairman, GLOSAS/USA *
    * (GLObal Systems Analysis and Simulation Association in the U.S.A.) *
    * Laureate of Lord Perry Award for Excellence in Distance Education *
    * Founder of CAADE *
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    * President Emeritus and V.P. for Technology and Coordination of *
    * Global University System (GUS) *
    * 43-23 Colden Street, Flushing, NY 11355-3998, U.S.A. *
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