EchoStar III Satellite Recovered and
Retired
Sept. 6, 2017
EchoStar
Corporation and Lockheed Martin
announced today that the EchoStar III
satellite has been successfully
recovered following an anomaly that
occurred in late July and retired per
the FCC regulations.
"After the
initial loss of contact, with a joint
effort by EchoStar and Lockheed Martin,
a command and control link was
reestablished and deorbit maneuvers
performed," said
Derek de Bastos,
chief technology officer for EchoStar
Satellite Services L.L.C. "EchoStar III
is now safely in a graveyard orbit more
than 350 kilometers above the
geostationary arc with its fuel and
pressurants depleted, batteries drained,
and systems shut down."
EchoStar III,
a Ku-band BSS satellite that provided
coverage over the U.S., was a fully
depreciated, non-revenue generating
asset owned by EchoStar. Manufactured by
Lockheed Martin and launched in 1997,
EchoStar III exceeded its 15 year design
life.