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Space Businesses

How a Billion-Dollar Satellite Risks Upending the Space Insurance Industry (yahoo.com) 86

"Viasat Inc. has more than $1 billion of orbiting satellites in trouble," reports Bloomberg, "and space insurers are girding for market-rattling claims." The company's roughly $1 billion ViaSat-3 Americas satellite, central to expanding its fixed-broadband coverage and fending off rivals including Elon Musk's Starlink, suffered an unexpected problem as it deployed its antenna in orbit in April. Should Viasat declare it a total loss, industry executives estimate the claim would reach a record-breaking $420 million and, in turn, make it harder — and more expensive — for other satellite operators to get insurance... Viasat on Aug. 24 reported another stricken spacecraft, saying its Inmarsat-6 F2 satellite launched in February suffered a power problem. The failure may end the craft's useful life and result in a $350 million insurance claim, Space Intel Report said.

Viasat's troubles in orbit come a few years after big-name insurers like American International Group Inc. and Allianz SE have shuttered their space portfolios. That's left a smaller pool of providers to absorb the risks in the notoriously high-stakes $553 million market...

Following news of the Inmarsat-6 anomaly, Viasat and other industry participants "will likely experience significant challenges with obtaining insurance for future satellite launches," [investment banking firm] William Blair's Louie DiPalma said in an Aug. 25 note... In 2019, the total losses from satellite claims amounted to $788 million, which overwhelmed the total premiums for the year at $500 million, according to launch and satellite database Seradata. In the years that followed, big names like American International Group Inc., Swiss Re AG, and Allianz SE all closed the door on satellite insurance.

Earlier this month Viasat's CEO says before deciding whether they'll file a claim, "There's no consequences to us taking another couple or three months to get good measurements and then making those decisions."
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How a Billion-Dollar Satellite Risks Upending the Space Insurance Industry

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  • What is with satellites and antennas? I've heard them having problems going back to the Galileo probe.
    • by drinkmorejava ( 909433 ) on Sunday September 03, 2023 @10:18PM (#63820914)
      High gain antennas (big ones that handle the bandwidth required for actual use, as opposed to small, fixed, low gain antennas) typically require some sort of deployment because they're too big to fit in the rocket. This generally involves a large number of hinges, or motors, or folded things with a lot of potential failure points. Hence them being a recurring problem.
      • High gain antennas ... typically require some sort of deployment because they're too big to fit in the rocket. This generally involves a large number of hinges, or motors, or folded things with a lot of potential failure points. Hence them being a recurring problem.

        Can't wait to see a high-gain antenna used as a metaphor in a Cialis/Viagra commercial ... :-)

      • Re:Antenna problem? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 03, 2023 @11:11PM (#63820996)

        Also in a near vacuum there's less stuff to convince two parts they're not actually one part when they touch each other...

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Good link, exactly why many of us come to Slashdot.

    • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Sunday September 03, 2023 @10:41PM (#63820946) Homepage Journal

      Fancy engineers make motors and gears that crank out the antennas into their full glory. This is considered very professional. They often fail.

      Cowboy engineers use metal springs and solenoids to release them. Totally not reversible. This is considered amateur hour and for pansies. They almost always work.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The problem with springs is that it's difficult to control the speed of deployment, leading to vibrations and potential damage to joints. As you mention, you also can't reverse them if something gets stuck. A recent ESA mission was able to fix a stuck antenna by reversing the motor a few times.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      > having problems going back to the Galileo probe.

      The likely problem with Galileo is that it sat in storage too long because the Challenger shuttle disaster delayed its launch. They should have re-lubed it, but some accounts are they they didn't want to risk damaging it during a re-lube, which required a delicate operation, because for some reason the back-up parts were not available at the time.

  • by silentbozo ( 542534 ) on Sunday September 03, 2023 @10:49PM (#63820950) Journal

    If the satellite is declared a total loss... will the insurer take control of it and then attempt to auction it off to someone who can send up a mission to restore it to operation and then resell it back to Viasat in the event it starts working again?

    • And yes, it is the property of whomever paid the claim.

      They will sell the salvage to the buyer that offers the highest price within a time frame.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      More likely they would simply seek to pay someone to go fix it, instead of paying Viasat. If that was possible, which it probably isn't.

      Nobody has a shuttle, or even a crewed capsule rated for EVAs. From the sound of the fault it might be fixable with a robot, but a very sophisticated one would be needed.

    • That would make a semi decent movie except it turns out the satellite broke because of some eldritch horror birthing itself through a cross dimensional quantum quasi portal opened up in the semi regressed nano-coupled sciencewords due to reasons. Get some B list action guy up there (probably with a chinese costar/love interest because ya know, gotta get that funding), a bag of popcorn and your night is set. Actually, its probably already on netflix somewhere.
      • by GFS666 ( 6452674 )

        That would make a semi decent movie except it turns out the satellite broke because of some eldritch horror birthing itself through a cross dimensional quantum quasi portal opened up in the semi regressed nano-coupled sciencewords due to reasons. Get some B list action guy up there (probably with a chinese costar/love interest because ya know, gotta get that funding), a bag of popcorn and your night is set. Actually, its probably already on netflix somewhere.

        You Sir win the award for most plot lines ever. But if I'm going to watch a Science Fiction/Horror/Fantasy B Movie, it better have a Sybil Danning ( https://www.imdb.com/name/nm00... [imdb.com] ) or Caroline Munro ( https://www.imdb.com/name/nm06... [imdb.com] ) level of female actress ;)

  • Don't insurance companies usually try to recoup their payout expenses by trying to recover those costs from the people/companies that caused the issue that required the payout? For example, if the launch vehicle explodes, they try to recover funds from whoever made the rocket; if the antenna doesn't deploy, they try to recover funds from whoever made that, etc... (Or from those entities insurance company.) That's pretty much how it works with automobile insurance.

  • by bob_jenkins ( 144606 ) on Sunday September 03, 2023 @11:38PM (#63821026) Homepage Journal

    Are any satellites launching with onboard repair robots yet? They'd aim at being small and simple and slow, co-opting the big satellite for communication, and able to crawl around and poke hinges and such.

    • by Saffaya ( 702234 )

      I guess that there is no pressure do design and deploy such robots if it's simpler to cash the insurance for a lost satellite.
      I suppose you could make a comparison between the insurance premium cost and the cost to design, test and develop such robots.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Such robots don't exist and would be extremely complex to design. They would have to have a huge range of movement and dexterity. Weight would also be a major issue - it increases launch costs, for something that if only needed if you screwed up.

      Given the frequency with which these things happen, and the falling price of developing and launching satellites, the R&D costs of such a robot would probably outweigh its value.

    • Space is hard. We're talking here about failures of simple deployment mechanisms. Getting a full on complex machine to survive in space is orders of magnitude more difficult and more expensive then designing some redundancy. In many cases actual satellite related failures are also due to fundamental design flaws so robots won't help you there.

  • Today I learned Viasat bought Inmarsat in 2022.

    Anyone know how Inmarsat Global Xpress is going these days?

  • by bigtreeman ( 565428 ) <[treecolin] [at] [gmail.com]> on Monday September 04, 2023 @12:53AM (#63821080)

    Insurance is gambling
    playing the numbers game
    usually stacked in the insurers favour
    hey, suck eggs, the casino lost this time

    • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

      Well, if the casino loses consistently, it will GTFO rather quickly. If a gambler loses consistently... he will continue to gamble. That's why the game needs to be stacked in casino's favour. This is the only way for the business to keep rolling.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The issue is that they will put up premiums to cover their losses from this. Everyone's premiums.

      The numbers shifted due to the massive pay out.

    • If the numbers are stacked its not gambling.
    • Burma shave
  • by Mirnotoriety ( 10462951 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @04:35AM (#63821374)
    ViaSat-3 is geostationary. Even if it worked it's not much use for Internet because of the satellite lag.
    • The RTT to GEO combined with the encoding means about 750ms of lag in the real world (At least that's my personal experience of Exede, which is on Viasat) and that is worthless for gaming and bad for VoIP but fine for every other common use case. You barely notice it while browsing, it's irrelevant to downloads or streaming, etc.

      I wasn't happy with it of course, but most people (who don't play twitch games online) won't have a problem with the performance except on stormy days.

  • As ex-employee that worked there many years ago, Viasat as a whole needs to get removed from the internet ecosystem. 90%+ of their employees, their work practices and their business model is toxic. Their idea of "home support" for internet is to just kick people off a satellite and let it reauthenticate at around 10kb/s.... I've watched them screw the US government out of millions of dollars easily. They're a leech on anything they touch.
  • Guy goes to the doctor, says "Doc, it hurts when I do this." Doc says, "Then don't do that."

    The satellite industry would probably sue the doctor for malpractice.
  • If you can't pay the loss, don't write the insurance. It is not a complicated question. Every time there are major insurance losses (see Florida), the insurance companies reevaluate their risk and generally raise rates. At some point, the rates become so high that no one can afford the insurance. If you are big corporation, you self-insure (put aside money to cover possible losses). If you are a private citizen, you are basically out of luck.
    • Weird thing is, that none of the space companies self-insure. That is why they need to create their own non-profit, owned by the space companies, insurance company.
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Monday September 04, 2023 @04:10PM (#63823020) Journal
    All of this insurance is in a for-profit companies. And they have been taking and taking and taking.
    The space industry (ideally the west, but certainly American) would be better off if they created an insurance company that all of them owned and paid into when needing to insure. Build up the pool and then, when large, re-invest back into these companies themselves.

    It is crazy to waste money on for-profit insurances and banks.
  • It's the adage being sold though. The auto industry has people thinking the same thing, You pay for insurance, get in a situation where it should be a phone-call to use the thing you're paying for, get retaliatory treatment in the form of increased rates for x or y. And people talk, and now it's an oddity to read how this mentality has invaded insurance.... on space stuff!!! wtaf

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