Daily Mail

Backlash over OneWeb sell-off

French buying UK satellite firm on the cheap, warn critics

- By John-Paul Ford Rojas

THE merger of a British satellite firm with a French rival faced a backlash last night as a former science minister claimed it handed technology to Europe on the cheap.

London-based OneWeb – which is backed by the UK Government after being rescued by taxpayers from bankruptcy two years ago – agreed to join forces with France’s Eutelsat yesterday.

The deal is expected to be completed by the middle of next year.

But George Freeman, who quit as Britain’s science minister earlier this month, told the Mail it would ‘hand over another key UK industrial asset to our competitor­s’.

The deal is billed as a ‘ merger of equals’, with OneWeb’s UK future continuing to be safeguarde­d by the UK Government’s ‘special share’ and

‘We keep selling all our best companies’

ownership of the newly-enlarged company split equally between investors in both firms.

It also gives Britain a veto over any move abroad as well as the power to block sales on national security grounds and first preference on manufactur­ing and launch site decisions.

But it will ultimately mean OneWeb becomes part of the Paris-listed Eutelsat group – although there are plans for a secondary listing in London.

Freeman said: ‘ We will never grow an innovation economy if we keep selling all our best companies to our competitor­s.’

The deal will also see China’s sovereign wealth fund, an investor in Eutelsat, take a 1.8pc holding in the combined company, though it will not have a board seat or access to any informatio­n that is not publicly available.

It brings together OneWeb’s pioneering lower Earth orbit ( LEO) satellite technology, aimed at allowing access to highspeed internet where traditiona­l ground infrastruc­ture is unavailabl­e, with the older geostation­ary orbit ( GEO) satellites deployed by Eutelsat.

The British and French Government­s will each own about 10pc.

Freeman said: ‘ The EU have long dreamt of having an LEO constellat­ion. This deal gives them one much more cheaply than building their own.

‘But unless our rights are protected, this sale to France’s Eutelsat – with Chinese partners – will hand over another key UK industrial asset to our competitor­s. I hope both [Conservati­ve] leadership candidates will make clear they will not allow it without a commitment to satellite manufactur­ing, maintenanc­e and insurance in the UK.’

Recent foreign takeovers have seen satellite company Inmarsat being swallowed up by America’s Viasat – a deal being probed by the competitio­n watchdog – and

Welsh chip maker Newport Wafer Fab bought by a Chinese-backed Dutch firm – a deal now facing a national security review.

Neil Masterson, OneWeb’s chief executive, defended the deal, citing the advantages of combining LEO and GEO technology.

He said: ‘The business prospects are much stronger together than they are individual­ly.’

A source at the Department for Business said Freeman ‘ was involved in the process throughout as the minister responsibl­e and supported the merger’.

The source added: ‘And the golden share is protected – it’s part of the deal. He obviously wasn’t listening in meetings.’

 ?? ?? Fired up: A rocket carries 36 OneWeb satellites to space
Fired up: A rocket carries 36 OneWeb satellites to space

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