SES Unveils New Satellite Operations Center
30 July 2014
Global satellite operator SES announced it is now
controlling nearly half of its growing fleet from a new
satellite operations center (SOC) at its commercial
sales and satellite engineering office in Princeton, New
Jersey.
A team of highly-skilled satellite controllers provides
24/7 monitoring and management of 23 SES satellites, as they
deliver services ranging from high quality broadcast
television channels to high-speed broadband to millions of
people on land, in the air, and at sea throughout North
America and around the world.
The remainder of the current SES global fleet of more
than 50 spacecraft is managed by controllers stationed at
SES’s global headquarters in Luxembourg. Both satellite
operations centers are fully integrated, enabling each
facility and control team to provide real-time services
delivery and backup support across the SES fleet.
“With a constant eye on operational excellence,
resiliency and customer success and security, SES has
positioned its three primary satellite operations centers in
widely diverse regions of the world,” noted Martin Halliwell,
Chief Technology Officer for SES. “Our new Princeton-based
SOC features the latest control technologies and
capabilities that will allow SES to meet ever-evolving
customer demands and an ever-changing satellite fleet for
decades to come,” Halliwell said. “Whether it’s electric
propulsion satellites or an expanding fleet of more than 100
satellites, SES has the expertise and the advanced satellite
control stations to deliver on the future.”
“Princeton has long been an important hub for SES
satellite engineering expertise and our customer account
teams. These critical groups can now collaborate more
closely with controllers located just down the hall, to
further ensure optimal operations and customer success and
satisfaction,” said Rick Starkovs, Senior Vice President of
Space Systems and Operations for SES. “Customer success and
team collaboration were major drivers behind the migration
of this mission-critical satellite operations center to
Princeton.”
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