A wave of consolidation is sweeping the satellite sector. The latest in a series of mergers and acquisitions is the announcement that Intelsat Ltd. would buy PanAmSat Holding Corporation in an all-cash deal for $3.2 billion, to create the largest satellite company with a combined fleet of 53 satellites and an annual revenue of more than $1.9 billion. So will the satellite operators head for more mergers and acquisitions? In an interview with Indiantelevision.com‘s Sibabrata Das, PanAmSat India managing director N Sampath discusses the opportunities that come along with consolidation and the challenges that the satellite industry faces as fibre-based communications become competitive. Sampath spent 29 years at the Indian Space and Research Organisation (ISRO). He created and operated Antrix Corporation as its chief executive till 2001 before joining PanAmSat India. He was responsible in establishing PanAmSat platform as a leading "neighbourhood" satellite for India, with major TV channels like Sony and NDTV as its customers. Sampath believes satellite operators will not face a slump in demand on the video side. New technologies and competition will, however, make it necessary for the satellite operators to cater to new segments of market which they need to nurture, he says. Excerpts of the interview. |
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Why is the commercial satellite industry rife with merger activity over the last few years? |
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What is the combined strength that the Intelsat and PanAmSat merger will bring? |
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But isn‘t the industry shadowed by too many players in a market that is not growing too fast?
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Are you referring to a build up of overcapacity? |
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How did it hit the satellite operators?
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What could have made ISRO decide on NSS? |
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Do you feel that DTH operators in India will face a satellite crunch? With so many DTH licenses, the real issue has to be availability of capacity. While in a normal condition the DTH operator would plan its space segment requirement as it grows, in India the capacity crunch seems to be the main problem. |
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Are satellite operators facing threat from transoceanic and transcontinental fibre networks? |
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Would you agree that there is a slump in demand for satellite services?
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And on the broadcasting side? |
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What about data transfer?
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Do you think satellites specially designed for broadband communications applications like Thaicom‘s IPStar will be successful? IP demand has not picked up as was originally expected. We don‘t know how IPStar will fare. We will have to wait and see. |
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What are the new initiatives PanAmSat is taking to tap new technologies? |
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