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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Israeli commercial Earth observation satellite series

Ilan Ramon
Eytan Stibbe ( commercial astronaut )

Orbital meteorological and remote sensing systems
Earth reconnaissance satellites (excluding Russia and the United States)

JSSW
FSW-0
FSW-1
FSW-2
FSW-3
JianBing

Earth Resources Observation Satellite ( EROS ) is a series of Israeli commercial Earth observation satellites , designed and manufactured by Israel Aircraft Industries (IAI), with optical payload supplied by El-Op . The satellites are owned and operated by ImageSat International N.V. ( ISI ), a company founded in 1997, as a Joint venture between IAI, El-Op and Core Software Technology (CST). [1] EROS A was launched on December 5, 2000 and EROS B on April 25, 2006.

As of November 2017, ImageSat International is controlled by Private-equity fund "FIMI". [2] In July 2021, ImageSat announced a partnership with "e-GEOS", a company owned by the Italian Space Agency and Telespazio , to consolidate their assets, including COSMO-SkyMed Satellites, to form one Satellite constellation . [3]

The "Eros" satellite project began in the second half of the 1990s, as an of initiative of IAI, with the aim of commercializing the technology of the Ofek series of reconnaissance satellites for the civilian market. A joint venture was established between IAI and the American company Core Software Technology (CST) in 1997 , named "West Indies Space" headquartered at Limassol , Cyprus , and incorporated in the Netherlands Antilles . [4] A year later El-Op , the camera maker of Ofek satellites, become a partner and held 12% of the joint venture. [5] The venture competed in the international markets with Lockheed Martin , which at the time was developing the Ikonos satellite, that had similar capabilities. [6]

The first satellite "EROS A" was developed in parallel with "Ofeq-4" and was based on it. "West Indies Space" signed an agreement with the Israeli government as its first customer. In March 1999, "West Indies Space" announced that the satellite would be launched in December 1999, using a Russian launcher. It also announced that about $250 million will be raised to launch the first three satellites, including insurance, and launch costs, purtily financed by issuance of bonds in the United States, and after the launch of the first satellite, the company will have an initial public offering of the shares of the venture. [6]

In July 1999, the venture completed a $93 million capital raising venture in the United States, changing the name of the joint venture from "West Indies Space" to "ImageSat International". With the entry of a group of investors from Europe and the United States into the venture, IAI reduced its share to 31% and El-Op to 9%. [7] The first satellite was finally launched on December 5, 2000. The launch was carried out aboard the Russian launcher "Start 1" at the launch site of the Svobodny Cosmodrome in Siberia. The Russian launcher was chosen because of its low cost, and it was the conversion of a Soviet ballistic missile. "EROS A" crossed the equator at 10:00 in the morning local time, according to the plan the additional satellites in the series would expand the time dimension, i.e. their crossing times over the equator would range from mid-morning to mid-afternoon, enabling the satellite constellation to provide comprehensive view of a location. Six weeks after the launch, ImageSat International announced that the satellite had begun filming from space. [8]

Following the launch of "EROS A", the program planned to market its capabilities to customers around the world, but the first customer announced was the Ministry of Defense of Israel , which paid about $15 million for the exclusive rights to receive all images of Israel's territory and an area within a radius of about 2,000Β km. The need for the satellite's capabilities was due to the failure of the launch of the Ofek-4 satellite, two years earlier and the decay of Ofek-3. [9] [10] Other customers of the satellite were the Taiwan Defense Ministry , [11] India , [12] and media organizations that purchased footage from the battlefield at the start of the Afghan war , footage that competitor "Space Imaging" (Owner of Ikonos) was banned from selling by the US government. [13] Additionally, a database was established with photographs of the satellite that were sold to companies around the world on demand. [1]

ImageSat International announced that it had begun construction of the second satellite in the series, a day before the launch of the first satellite "EROS A". According to the plan, the launch of the "EROS B" was to take place in 2001, after which another 6 satellites in the series were planned. In July 2000, the company announced the completion of a capital raising of more than $90 million. A year later, it signed a $70 million credit agreement with Bank Leumi to finance the further development of the satellite series, and announced that the launch of the second satellite had been postponed to 2003. [14] On July 28, 2001, IAI officially signed an agreement with ImageSat International, to build the $110 million EROS B satellite. However the project was delayed due to difficulties in signing enough commercial customers to meet the financial costs. The second satellite in the series was finally launched on April 25, 2006. [15] Due to the failure of Ofek-6 launch, the CEO of ImageSat suggested that the company should take ownership also of the Ofek program. [16]

Following the launch of "EROS B", Imgesat planned to have an initial public offering on NASDAQ , at a market value of half a billion dollars, and to raise capital for the further development and launch of "EROS" satellites. [17] However, in July 2007, Israeli and American investors submitted a $6 billion lawsuit against the company, in a Manhattan court alleging that the company refused to provide services to Venezuela because of the hostile relations of the country's ruler, Hugo Chavez , with Israel and its ties with Iran. [18] According to the plaintiffs, the root of the problem was joint ownership of the venture by private investors and IAI (owned by the State of Israel). According to them, the partial ownership that the state has in the company harmed the chance of profitable contracts, due to political considerations. They claimed that IAI preferred political considerations over economic interests. It was further alleged, that additional contracts were not executed for political reasons, including with: Angola , Russia and Taiwan . The lawsuit also claimed that the only bans imposed, at the time of the company's establishment, were that it was not allowed to sell satellites images to any country within a radius of up to 1,550 miles from Israel. [19]

A year later, the lawsuit was dismissed, but Core Software Technology, one of the minority shareholders in Imagesat, filed a new lawsuit against New York in court. This lawsuit was also dismissed and Morris Talansky , one of the investores, filed a third lawsuit. [20] As part of the lawsuit series, Steve Wilson, the founder of Core Software, which was one of the original initiators of venture, claimed that IAI deceived the other investors in the venture and took it over. In January 1998 the satellite that was supposed to be EROS A was launched as Ofeq-4 and failed. The satellite that was finally launched was in its replacement. In addition, he claimed that EROS B was not built according to the specifications provided by Imgesat, it was delivered three years late, and was in fact a duplicate of "Ofeq-5". [21] [22]

Further legal disputes against the company included: a lawsuit by the CEO for bonus payments, allegedly owned to him for sighing a deal with Angola. [23] And an attempt to file a lawsuit against the company in Israel. [24]

Additionally, the State Comptroller of Israel also published a critical audit report, in Septem
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