Iran is taking preliminary steps toward leasing or buying
commercial satellites and potentially acquiring related
technologies, according to industry officials familiar with the
matter, another sign of dramatic changes stemming from the recent
international rollback of economic sanctions.
Providers of satellite services and hardware on both sides of
the Atlantic are maneuvering to land business in Iran, even as
Tehran has started recruiting Western advisers to pave the way for
such deals, which could include using satellites already in orbit,
according to some of these officials. But agreements, they
predicted, are at least weeks or months away.
Some of the global satellite industry's biggest players are
actively involved, and the secretive Iranian Space Agency already
has made preliminary moves to get assistance from various legal and
technical experts in the U.K., according to one person involved in
the discussions.
For now, these officials said, European space companies seem to
have the inside track thanks in part to closer diplomatic ties and
because the European Union's remaining sanctions against Iran are
less restrictive than those enforced by the U.S.
The current talks are largely exploratory, according to industry
officials, with no major satellite-related deals believed to be
imminent as Iranian President Hassan Rouhani visits Paris this
week. The heightened level of activity, however, reflects Iran's
long-standing interest in gaining access to Western
commercial-space technology.
Iranian government officials at an aviation-industry conference
in Tehran said they weren't responsible for space issues, and the
relevant official couldn't immediately be reached for comment.
Since the rollback of international nuclear and other sanctions
nearly two weeks ago, Iran has moved quickly to complete
multibillion-dollar deals for aircraft, cars, construction projects
and energy with Italian and French companies. Now, authorities in
Tehran also appear ready to rev up negotiations for potential
satellite pacts with U.S. and European suppliers.
"There are going to be some big contracts, and they're going to
come quickly," said Keith Volkert, a U.S.-based satellite-industry
consultant who works for American and European clients. As soon as
Tehran decides on a path, he adds, a number of satellite-services
companies "could put coverage into Iran instantly."
Tehran has built and launched a number of fledgling domestic
satellites, though so far they have all been relatively small and
the government was forced to turn to Russia, China and India for
design and launch of potentially more-ambitious projects. An
Italian-built communications satellite that was never delivered
because it was caught up in sanctions may be turned over to Tehran
in coming months, according to industry officials.
But bigger and more expensive plans may be brewing. Paris-based
Eutelsat Communications SA, which operates a fleet of 39 satellites
with considerable capacity for television broadcasting and Internet
connectivity over Iran and the Middle East, is talking with the
country's space agency about expanding offerings in the region,
according to one of the industry officials familiar with the
matter.
Another official said two British advisory outfits—including a
London-based law firm specializing in international trade—also are
engaged in early discussions with the agency about ways to boost
Iran's Internet and possibly video connections. Options include
buying new ground equipment or renting capacity on foreign
satellites. Negotiations for Iran to buy new satellites are bound
to be more complex and controversial, so they would take longer to
nail down.
Yet initial steps have begun. A Washington-based partner at
Hogan Lovells, an international law firm with an extensive list of
satellite and telecommunications clients, said "we are advising a
wide range of companies about potential provision of services and
equipment to Iran." The partner, Stephen Propst, also stressed that
at this point, U.S. companies are lagging behind rivals across the
Atlantic.
"On the European side, the lifting of the sanctions is broader
and they are in a stronger position to do some of these
transactions," Mr. Propst said.
Tehran's leadership has been frustrated over the years by the
refusal of most Western satellite and component makers—along with
major insurance companies—to open a dialogue about possible
contracts as a result of stringent trade and banking
restrictions.
"The Iranians have been looking at a satellite project for many,
many years, including ultimately expanding services to other
countries," said Jeremy Rose, a partner in Comsys Ltd., a British
consulting firm involved in the latest round of discussions with
Iranian officials.
In coming years, many experts predict Iran is likely to set its
sights on acquiring advanced ground systems or terminals, and
eventually large telecommunications or imaging satellites from
Western sources. Vietnam and Myanmar are among the countries that
previously set up their own national satellite operators.
Egypt's plans to buy two satellites from Thales Alenia Space,
majority-owned by France's Thales Group SA, are expected to be
completed soon, according to industry officials familiar with the
details. A spokeswoman for Thales Alenia said negotiations were
still under way.
Iran's focus on commercial space stretches back at least to the
beginning of the decade, when officials of Informatics Services
Corp., affiliated with the Central Bank of Iran, publicly
acknowledged reverse-engineering some U.S.-designed ground
equipment they purchased before it was restricted by sanctions
imposed by Washington. Known as VSAT systems, for very small
aperture terminals, such hardware allows consumers, corporate
networks, automated credit-card transactions and many other
applications to send and receive data using satellites and ground
stations.
"The Iranians have always been quite interested in VSAT
technology," said Tim Farrar, a U.S.-based satellite
consultant.
Mr. Farrar and other industry experts said the U.S. government
might look favorably on some transactions involving satellite
technology geared for consumer applications, as another way to
ensure broader Internet access for Iran's population.
Write to Andy Pasztor at andy.pasztor@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 28, 2016 07:05 ET (12:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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