PARIS -- The GeoEye-1 high-resolution optical Earth
observation satellite will not enter commercial service until December due to
software glitches on the satellite's attitude-control system that went
undetected in ground testing, GeoEye Inc. officials
said Nov. 11.
They said
the problem is reparable and will not affect the satellite's performance or
service life.
But the
software issue is delaying the entry into force of a long-expected contract
with the U.S. National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) for GeoEye-1
imagery.
A drop in
NGA business is the main reason Dulles, Va.-based GeoEye
reported a 33-percent decline in revenue, to $35.9 million, for the three
months ending Sept. 30 compared to the same period in 2007. The NGA contract,
called a Service Level Agreement, is expected to follow once NGA has verified
GeoEye-1's imagery quality.
GeoEye
officials had expected to bring GeoEye-1 into service within 45 days of its
Sept. 6 launch. GeoEye Chief Operating Officer
William Schuster said that goal was overly ambitious, especially given the
unforeseen software problem.
In a
conference call on the company's financial results, Schuster said the software
issue is "the main reason why checkout has taken longer than expected [but]
won't have any impact on future GeoEye-1 operations or life expectancy."
Schuster
told Space News Nov. 13 that the issue was close to being resolved. "We think
we've found the proverbial smoking gun," he said.
GeoEye-1
was built by General Dynamics/Advanced Information Systems of Gilbert, Ariz. Industry sources said the problem is with the
software interface between the spacecraft and a star tracker system supplied by
Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp. of Boulder, Colo. The glitch affects the ability to
precisely determine the ground-location coordinates of GeoEye-1 imagery,
sources said.
GeoEye
Chief Executive Matthew O'Connell said the NGA contract, once it enters into
force, will "even out the peaks and valleys in NGA's
image-ordering process so that we get a predictable revenue stream and the
government gets a predictable supply of imagery."
NGA
accounts for about half GeoEye's total revenue.
O'Connell
said GeoEye's decision to modify its business model for
the GeoEye-1 satellite should result in better service to the U.S. government and higher incremental
revenue for the company.
Under GeoEye's former sales practice, a non-U.S. regional
affiliate purchased access to GeoEye's Ikonos satellite by buying minutes of control of the
spacecraft. The images taken during these minutes became the property of the
regional affiliate. GeoEye then would need to
repurchase them for subsequent sale to the U.S. government or another customer
outside the regional affiliate's jurisdiction.
For
GeoEye-1, the company is asking its foreign affiliates to purchase a number of
kilometers of imagery, not minutes of satellite time. In addition, the
purchased data will be exclusive to the regional affiliate only in the
affiliate's geographic coverage area. GeoEye Inc. is
free to sell the data outside that area to other customers, including NGA.
The new
policy also permits GeoEye Inc. to provide Google with the huge amount of GeoEye-1 imagery to which Google is entitled under a long-term contract with GeoEye. Under the contract, Google
is the only online mapping site with access to GeoEye-1.
O'Connell
said the Google contract "won't be material in the
financial picture but will be a steady source of recurring revenue. It will be
ancillary revenue. There is no specific dedication of satellite or imaging
time; they just want a copy of everything we take. For every picture we take,
we get ancillary revenue by delivering a copy to Google."
"They have
a lot of dough, a big appetite and, as is common with high-technology people,
they tend to want more, faster," O'Connell said of Google.
GeoEye
has signed up three foreign government customers for GeoEye-1 data, with a
fourth expected to be signed in December and a fifth in early 2009. These governments
will be upgrading their existing Ikonos ground
stations to receive GeoEye-1 imagery.
On the
commercial front, the company signed a multiyear, multimillion-dollar agreement
with Telespazio of Rome for GeoEye-1 data. "They have
committed to a guaranteed minimum annual payment for imaging," O'Connell said
of Telespazio, whose GeoEye-1 contract makes Telespazio the exclusive GeoEye-1 distributor in Europe and North Africa.
O'Connell
said international demand for high-resolution satellite imagery remains strong,
especially in Russia and China. He said China appears to be using more GeoEye satellite data for its infrastructure development
than the United States. Chinese customers are purchasing
data to plan airport installation or extension, and for land-use decisions such
as where to place new roads so that they have a minimal impact on the amount of
food-producing land.
The NGA and
GeoEye signed the GeoEye-1 contract in September
2004, with the agency agreeing to pay $237 million of the satellite's expected
$502 million in construction and launch costs.
O'Connell
said the final GeoEye-1 project cost likely will be slightly less than $502
million, a fact GeoEye thinks works to its advantage
as the U.S. government determines whether to move forward with the purchase of
its own GeoEye-1-type satellites under a program called Broad Area Space-based
Imagery Collector (BASIC).
The U.S.
Congress has withheld funding for the BASIC satellites pending a review to be
conducted in 2009.
The
suspension of the BASIC program is clearly good news for GeoEye.
O'Connell said the government's current focus on cutting costs should cast the
GeoEye-1 product in a favorable light.
"People at
the Pentagon look at this [GeoEye-1] and say, 'Wow, here's a fixed-cost program
that came in under budget.' When has a Pentagon program come in under budget?" GeoEye has begun reviewing designs of a GeoEye-2 satellite
that could be launched in 2012 assuming a construction contract is signed late
this year or early in 2009, O'Connell said. GeoEye
will use its free cash flow to fund the project and has no immediate need to
turn to the debt market, he said.