SES-10
launched
successfully
on
SpaceX’s
flight-proven
Falcon 9
rocket
SES
announces
that the
SES-10
satellite
was
successfully
launched
into
space
onboard
a
flight-proven
SpaceX
Falcon 9
rocket
at 18:27
EDT from
NASA’s
Kennedy
Space
Centre,
Florida.
SES-10
is the
first
geostationary
commercial
satellite
to ever
launch
on a
flight-proven
first-stage
rocket
booster.
With
a
Ku-band
payload
of 55
36MHz
transponder
equivalents,
of which
27 are
incremental,
the
multi-mission
spacecraft
is the
first
SES
satellite
wholly
dedicated
to
providing
service
to Latin
America.
SES-10's
high-powered
beams
will
augment
SES’s
capabilities
across
the
region
providing
direct-to-home
broadcasting,
enterprise
and
mobility
services.
SES-10
will
replace
capacity
currently
provided
by other
SES
satellites
at 67
degrees
West, as
well as
bring
additional
capacity
to
Mexico,
Central
America,
South
America
and the
Caribbean.
Pursuant
to an
agreement
with the
Andean
Community
(Bolivia,
Colombia,
Ecuador
and
Peru),
the
satellite
will
operate
as the
Andean
Community’s
Simón
Bolivar
2
providing
satellite
capacity
for each
Andean
Member
State.
The
Andean
satellite
project
comes
from the
shared
Member
States’
interests
of
having a
common
satellite
network
taking
advantage
of the
Andean
spectrum
resources
at 67
degrees
West.
“The
successful
launch
of
SES-10
on
SpaceX's
first
ever
mission
using a
flight-proven
rocket
is
opening
up a new
era of
spaceflight.
We are
proud to
have
partnered
with
SpaceX
on this
journey
of
innovating
and
using
reusable
rockets
that
will
make
access
to space
more
efficient
in terms
of cost
and
manifest
management,"
said
Martin
Halliwell,
Chief
Technology
Officer
at SES.
“The
additional
capacity
offered
by
SES-10
is ideal
for
providing
additional
TV
services
with
better
picture
quality
as well
as
faster
broadband
services
– both
of which
will be
welcomed
by
millions
of
people
throughout
Latin
America
and the
Caribbean.”