Attachment Narrative

This document pretains to SES-STA-20120614-00508 for Special Temporal Authority on a Satellite Earth Station filing.

IBFS_SESSTA2012061400508_955010

                                     Before the
                      FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
                               Washington, D.C. 20554

                                              )
                                              )
In the Matter of                              )
                                              )
ECHOSTAR BROADCASTING CORPORATION ) File No. SES-STA-2012_____-_____
                                              ) Call Sign E080120
Application for Special Temporary Authority )
to Operate Its Transmit/Receive and           )
Feeder Link Earth Stations to Raise and       )
Test the EchoStar 16 Satellite at 67.1° W.L., )
and Subsequently to Move EchoStar 16 to       )
61.5º W.L.                                    )
                                              )


                APPLICATION FOR SPECIAL TEMPORARY AUTHORITY

I.       INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY

         EchoStar Broadcasting Corporation (“EBC”) respectfully requests 60-day Special

Temporary Authority (“STA”), commencing on or about August 20, 2012, to permit EBC to

operate one of its transmit/receive earth stations (Call Sign E080120) (1) to perform telemetry,

tracking, and control (“TT&C”) operations while raising and maneuvering the Direct Broadcast

Satellite (“DBS”), EchoStar 16, to the 67.1° W.L. orbital location; (2) to test the satellite at that

location in the 12.2-12.7 and 17.3-17.8 GHz bands; and (3) upon completion of in-orbit testing,

to provide TT&C during the relocation of EchoStar 16 to 61.5º W.L. EBC’s sister company,

EchoStar Satellite Operating Corporation (“ESOC”), has already filed an application to launch

EchoStar 16 and operate it at the 61.5° W.L. orbital location,1 and an STA application (1) to raise

EchoStar 16 to 67.1° W.L. and test it at that location and (2) to relocate EchoStar 16 to 61.5º



1
    See File No. SAT-LOA-20110902-00172, Call Sign S2844 (filed Sept. 2, 2011).


W.L. upon the completion of testing.2 EBC has already filed STA applications for orbit raising

and testing for two other earth stations (Call Signs E070014 and E980005).3

         Testing EchoStar 16 and conducting TT&C operations during orbit raising and

maneuvers at 67.1° W.L. and during its relocation to 61.5° W.L. will ensure that EchoStar 16 is

fully operational and ready to provide service once it arrives at 61.5° W.L. The proposed

maneuvers and testing will not adversely affect the operations of any other spacecraft or other

authorized spectrum users. EchoStar 16 is scheduled to launch around August 20, 2012, and

EBC requests action on this request by that date.

II.      GRANT OF THIS APPLICATION IS IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST

         The Federal Communications Commission (“Commission”) has a long-standing policy of

granting STA where such authorization will not cause harmful interference and will serve the

public interest, convenience, and necessity.4 The requested operations meet both of these tests.

The Commission has also recognized the benefits to the public interest, convenience, and

necessity of granting STA to allow in-orbit testing at locations different from those authorized,

subject to coordination with neighboring satellites.5 Moreover, as the Commission has




2
    See File No. SAT-STA-20120315-00049, Call Sign S2844 (filed Mar. 15, 2012).
3
 See File Nos. SES-STA-20120316-00274, SES-STA-20120316-00275, Call Signs E070014
and E980005 (filed Mar. 16, 2012).
4
  See, e.g., Newcomb Communications, Inc., Order and Authorization, 8 FCC Rcd. 3631, 3633
(1993); Columbia Communications Corp., Order, 11 FCC Rcd. 8639, 8640 (1996); American
Telephone & Telegraph Co., Order, 8 FCC Rcd. 8742 (1993).
5
  See INTELSAT LLC, Order and Authorization, 16 FCC Rcd. 16208 ¶ 8 (2001) (“[A] grant of
Special Temporary Authority to conduct in-orbit testing . . . at the 58.5° E.L. orbital location,
instead of [the licensee’s] authorized 62° E.L. location, will serve the public interest. The
Commission typically allows licensees to conduct in-orbit testing at orbit locations different from
those authorized, subject to coordination with affected adjacent satellite operators . . . .”); see
also EchoStar Satellite Corp., Order and Authorization, 15 FCC Rcd. 12609 (2000).


                                                 2


previously found, deployment of new DBS capacity serves the public interest, convenience, and

necessity.6

         Consistent with the Commission’s well-settled precedent, grant of this STA request will

serve the public interest by ensuring that the new DBS satellite is fully operational before

commencing service. Raising EchoStar 16 to 67.1° W.L., testing it at that location, and then

relocating it to 61.5º W.L. will not cause harmful interference to any other spacecraft or

authorized user of the spectrum. Testing of EchoStar 16 at 67.1º W.L. has been coordinated and

will follow guidelines to avoid interference with nearby DBS satellites. While the satellite is

raised and moved to 67.1° W.L., and again while it is moved to 61.5° W.L., all transponders

(other than the TT&C beacons) on the satellite will be turned off.

         While the satellite is at 67.1º W.L., EBC will ensure that operations do not cause harmful

interference to any nearby satellite. EBC’s affiliate, ESOC, controls EchoStar 3 at 61.8º W.L.,7

EchoStar 12 at 61.35º W.L., and EchoStar 15 at 61.65º W.L.,8 and EBC will ensure that

operations under this STA do not interfere with the operations of those satellites. Additionally,

pursuant to an agreement between SES Latin America S.A. and SES S.A. (collectively, “SES”)

and EBC’s affiliate, QuetzSat, S. de R.L. de C.V., SES currently controls QuetzSat-1 at 67.1º

W.L.; EBC, however, expects that it will coordinate with SES for QuetzSat-1 to be moved from

67.1º W.L. before EchoStar 16 is due to arrive at that location.9 Finally, Nimiq 5 at 72.7º W.L.,

licensed to Telesat Canada Ltd., is the only other DBS satellite operating within six degrees of

6
    See, e.g., DIRECTV Enterprises, Order and Authorization, 14 FCC Rcd. 13159 (1999).
7
 EchoStar 3 is operating at 61.8º W.L. pursuant to 180-day STA. See Stamp Grant, File No.
SAT-STA-20120424-00074 (granted June 12, 2012).
8
 EchoStar expects that EchoStar 15 will be at 61.65º W.L. when EchoStar 16 is launched. See
Stamp Grant, File No. SAT-STA-20120531-00091 (granted June 12, 2012).
9
 See File Nos. SES-STA-20111021-01250, SES-STA-20111021-01251, Call Signs E980005
and E070014 (filed Sept. 21, 2011).


                                                 3


the testing location. The entire broadcast satellite service capacity of Nimiq 5 is leased to ESOC,

and EBC will ensure that operations under this STA do not interfere with Nimiq 5’s operations.

       The requested STA also serves the public interest, as it will allow the EchoStar 16

satellite to be safely maneuvered to, and tested at, the 67.1° W.L. orbital location, and then again

moved to its permanent home at 61.5º W.L. The in-orbit testing will ensure proper operation of

the satellite prior to bringing the satellite into service, thereby minimizing the potential for future

service interruptions. Upon its relocation to 61.5º W.L., EchoStar 16 will be available to provide

DBS service to the public.

III.   OPERATING PARAMETERS

       During the orbital raising of EchoStar 16 at 67.1° W.L. and during the move to 61.5º

W.L., all transponders other than the TT&C transponders will be switched off, and EBC will

operate its earth stations subject to the following conditions:

       1.      No harmful interference will be caused to any lawfully operating satellite network
               or radio communication system, and EBC’s operations will cease immediately
               upon notification of harmful interference. Furthermore, EBC shall notify the
               Commission immediately, in writing, of any such event.

       2.      EBC will accept interference from any lawfully operating satellite network or
               radio communication system.

       In addition, during in-orbit testing, EBC will operate its earth stations subject to the

following conditions:

       1.      EBC will not cause harmful interference to, and will not claim protection from
               interference caused by, any other lawfully operating satellites or
               radiocommunications systems.

       2.      Upon notification of any harmful interference, EBC will cease its test operations
               immediately. In addition, EBC will inform the Commission in writing that it has
               received such a notification.




                                                   4


IV.    SECTION 304 WAIVER

       In accordance with Section 304 of the Communications Act of 1934, 47 U.S.C. § 304,

EBC hereby waives any claim to the use of any particular frequency or of the electromagnetic

spectrum because of the previous use of the same, whether by license or otherwise.

V.     CONCLUSION

       For the foregoing reasons, EBC respectfully requests the grant of a 60-day STA,

commencing on or about August 20, 2012, to operate one of its transmit/receive earth stations

(Call Sign E080120) to launch and raise EchoStar 16 to, and conduct testing at, 67.1° W.L., and

then to relocate EchoStar 16 to 61.5º W.L.



                                             Respectfully submitted,

                                                    /s/

Pantelis Michalopoulos                       Alison Minea
Stephanie A. Roy                             Corporate Counsel
Steptoe & Johnson LLP                        EchoStar Broadcasting Corporation
1330 Connecticut Avenue N.W.                 1110 Vermont Avenue NW, Suite 750
Washington, D.C. 20036                       Washington, DC 20005
(202) 429-3000                               (202) 293-1216
Counsel for EchoStar Broadcasting
Corporation


June 14, 2012




                                                5



Document Created: 2012-06-14 10:54:53
Document Modified: 2012-06-14 10:54:53

© 2024 FCC.report
This site is not affiliated with or endorsed by the FCC