Attachment Exhibit A

This document pretains to SES-STA-20060323-00500 for Special Temporal Authority on a Satellite Earth Station filing.

IBFS_SESSTA2006032300500_490223

                                           Exhibit A

             PETITION FOR WAIVER OF SECTIONS 25.137 AND 25.114

        Pursuant to Section 25.137 of the Federal Communications Commission’s
(“Commission” or “FCC”) rules, earth station applicants “requesting authority to operate
with a non-U.S. licensed space station to serve the United States” must demonstrate that
effective competitive opportunities exist and must provide the same technical information
required by Section 25.114 for U.S.-licensed space stations.1 Intelsat herein seeks
authority to provide launch and early orbit phase (“LEOP”) services -- not commercial
services -- to the United States, and thus believes that Section 25.137 does not apply.

        To the extent the Commission determines, however, that Intelsat’s request for
authority to provide LEOP services on a special temporary basis is a request to serve the
United States with a non U.S.-licensed satellite, Intelsat respectfully requests a waiver of
Sections 25.137 and 25.114 of the Commission’s rules.2 The Commission may grant a
waiver for good cause shown.3 The Commission typically grants a waiver where the
particular facts make strict compliance inconsistent with the public interest.4 In granting
a waiver, the Commission may take into account considerations of hardship, equity, or
more effective implementation of overall policy on an individual basis.5 Waiver is
therefore appropriate if special circumstances warrant a deviation from the general rule,
and such a deviation will serve the public interest.

        In this case, good cause exists for a waiver of both Section 25.137 and Section
25.114. With respect to Section 25.114, Intelsat seeks authority only to provide LEOP
services for the Satmex-6 satellite. Intelsat has already provided, in its pending
modification application for this earth station,6 all the technical information relating to
the LEOP services that Intelsat will be performing. The information sought by Section
25.114 is not relevant to LEOP services. Moreover, Intelsat does not have – and would
not easily be able to obtain -- such information because Intelsat is not the operator of the
Satmex-6 satellite, nor is Intelsat in contractual privity with that operator. Rather, Intelsat

1
    47 C.F.R. § 25.137 (emphasis added).
2
    47 C.F.R. §§ 25.137 and 25.114.
3
    47 C.F.R. §1.3.
4
 N.E. Cellular Tel. Co. v. FCC, 897 F.2d 1164, 1166 (D.C. Cir. 1990) (“Northeast
Cellular”).
5
 WAIT Radio v. FCC, 418 F.2d 1153, 1159 (D.C. Cir. 1969); Northeast Cellular, 897
F.2d at 1166.
6
 See Satellite Communications Services; Re: Satellite Radio Applications Accepted For
Filing, Rept. No. SES-00768, File No., SES-AMD-20051116-01587 (Nov. 23, 2005)
(Public Notice).


has a contract with Space Systems Loral (“Loral”), the manufacturer of the Satmex-6
satellite, to conduct LEOP services for the satellite.

        The information that Intelsat is not including is not required to determine potential
harmful interference. The Schedule S information for this satellite would pertain to the
operation of the Satmex-6 satellite at its final orbital location. However, the present
application for LEOP services involves communications prior to the satellite attaining its
final location in the geostationary orbit. In other words, during the LEOP mission, the
earth station will not be communicating with a satellite located in the geostationary orbit.
Rather, it will be transmitting to a satellite traveling on its “transfer orbit” or “LEOP
path”, which starts immediately following its separation from a launch vehicle, and ends
when the satellite reaches its geostationary orbital location. As evidenced by the
Comsearch report attached to the related pending application for this earth station,
Intelsat has coordinated the LEOP operations with potentially affected terrestrial
operators. Moreover, as with any STA, Intelsat will perform the LEOP services on a
non-interference basis.

       Because it is not relevant to the service for which Intelsat seeks authorization, and
because obtaining the information would be a hardship, Intelsat seeks a waiver of all the
information required by Section 25.114. As noted above, Intelsat has provided the
required technical information that is relevant to the LEOP services for which Intelsat
seeks authorization.

        Good cause also exists to waive Section 25.137. Section 25.137 is designed to
ensure that “U.S.-licensed satellite systems have effective competitive opportunities to
provide analogous services” in other countries. Here, there is no service being provided
by the satellite; it is simply being placed in its orbital location after separating from the
launch vehicle. Thus, the purpose of the information required by Section 25.137 is not
implicated here. For example, Section 25.137(d) requires earth station applicants
requesting authority to operate with a non-U.S.-licensed space station that is not in orbit
and operating to post a bond.7 The underlying purpose in having to post a bond—i.e., to
prevent warehousing of orbital locations by operators seeking to serve the United
States—would not be served by requiring Intelsat to post a bond in order to provide
approximately 10 days of LEOP services to the Satmex-6 satellite.

        It is Intelsat’s understanding that Satmex-6 is licensed by Mexico, which is a
WTO-member country. To the extent that the operator of the Satmex-6 satellite intends
to serve the United States, either that operator or the operators of earth stations seeking
access to the satellite presumably would provide all relevant information required by
Section 25.137 and would post the required bond. Thus, the purposes of Section
25.137—to ensure that U.S. satellite operators enjoy “effective competitive
opportunities” to serve foreign markets and to prevent warehousing of orbital locations
serving the United States—will not be undermined by grant of this waiver request.


7
    See 47 C.F.R. §25.137(d)(4).


                                              2


         Finally, Intelsat notes that it expects to operate with the Satmex-6 satellite using
its U.S. earth station for a period of approximately 10 days. Requiring Intelsat to obtain
copious technical and legal information from an unrelated party, where there is no risk of
harmful interference and the operations will cease after approximately 10 days, would
pose undue hardship without serving underlying policy objectives. Given these particular
facts, the waiver sought herein is plainly appropriate.




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Document Created: 2006-03-24 14:20:14
Document Modified: 2006-03-24 14:20:14

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