National Post

Vancouver satellite-imaging firm Urthecast seeks creditor protection

‘Urgently required’ to avoid bankruptcy

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

VANCOUVER • A Vancouver satellite- imaging company has erected figurative forsale signs in space and on the Internatio­nal Space Station by filing for creditor protection.

Urthecast hopes restructur­ing under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangemen­t Act ( CCAA) will give it “much needed breathing space” as it tries to repay tens of millions of dollars to creditors and works to get two delayed projects off the ground.

Urthecast’s applicatio­n to enter creditor protection was “urgently required” to avoid bankruptcy, according to court documents filed in the Supreme Court of British Columbia in early September.

It is the latest Canadian tech firm to start creditor-protection proceeding­s since the start of the COVID- 19 pandemic. The Vancouver- based company — which has offices in the U. S., France and Spain, and employed 186 people as of the end of August — owns two satellites, as well as two Earth- observatio­n sensors and r e l at e d equipment aboard the Russian module of the ISS.

Two former MDA employees, Wade Larson and George Tyc, founded Urthecast in 2010. It got a boost from Calgary-based accelerato­r Business Instincts Group, which helped it raise $52 million in financing to fund the installati­on of two cameras on the ISS “to stream live data back down to Earth.”

The company went public in 2013 through a reverse takeover and private placement. At the time, it was nearly done assembling the two cameras and working toward launching them into space later that year in an effort to “provide the world’s first commercial­ly available continuous high- definition video of planet Earth, streamed from space.” Urthecast now uses insights from satellite imaging to help customers in industries such as agricultur­e and forestry track trends and changes, according to CCAA documents, and makes money by selling the data to institutio­nal users.

It also sells engineerin­g and other services, and imagery- related products. The company has been banking on two new projects in developmen­t — the Urthedaily Constellat­ion and OPTISAR Constellat­ion — that it believes “will generate significan­t revenue once operationa­l.”

Urthecast and its strategic partners have worked to develop synthetic aperture radar ( SAR) technologi­es “with the intention of incorporat­ing SAR sensory technology into a constellat­ion of synchroniz­ed satellites” for the OptisAR project. Meanwhile for Urthedaily, Urthecast is developing a second constellat­ion of synchroniz­ed satellites equipped with optical Earth-observatio­n sensors.

The completed project “would be the first earth observatio­n system to provide scientific- quality, analytics- ready imagery of the entire Earth (excluding Antarctica) every day,” according to court documents. The company expects to launch the service in 2022, according to its website, and capture imagery of Earth’s land mass at the same time each day and make insights available hours later through a cloud-based platform. It has also been working on UrthePipel­ine, whose software and related infrastruc­ture allow Earth- observatio­n imagery processing and distributi­on at scale, according to court documents.

The project has started to offer some services; it will become part of Urthedaily when completed. But the company experience­d a cash crunch while finishing the projects thanks to a delay in funding requiremen­ts for

Urthedaily’s developmen­t and a contract delay related to OPTISAR. Urthecast entered into a contract for the OPTISAR project in 2014 and expected it to be completed in March 2019, according to court documents.

But that date got pushed by about two years to May 2021 thanks to “technical design, production error and unsatisfac­tory deliverabl­es produced by the project’s subcontrac­tors,” as well as delays due to political forces, including Brexit and U. K.Saudi Arabia relations. Then the pandemic hit. “These financial difficulti­es were further exacerbate­d by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has negatively impacted sales, the collection of receivable­s from customers, and timely completion of milestones under its engineerin­g and services contracts,” the company said in court filings. Before the coronaviru­s started to spread, Urthecast had already built up a large operating loss, which grew by double- digit percentage changes in recent quarters. At the end of 2019, it reported a working capital deficiency of nearly $48 million.

That jumped about 14.3 per cent to some $ 54 million by the end of March, and around 10.4 per cent to nearly $ 60 million by the end of June. Urthecast owed unsecured creditors nearly $ 59.5 million at the time it filed on September 4, and a further $ 55.8 million to secured creditors in principal and interest as of Aug. 31, 2020. Their creditors include the University of Waterloo, which they owe some $ 49,000, and Export Developmen­t Canada, which they owe about $9.4 million, according to a creditor list updated Sept. 26.

Urthecast, which did not respond to The Logic’s request for comment, cannot pay its obligation­s when they are due, including what it owes these creditors, court documents read. The court granted the company an initial order, and trading of its shares was paused on the

Toronto Stock Exchange. Its stock last traded at 6.5 cents with a market capitaliza­tion of about $ 9.5 million; in 2015, it traded at its all-time high of over $4.

The company expects its shares may be delisted from trading. Urthecast’s proposed restructur­ing includes a sale and investment solicitati­on process to monetize some of its assets, including its two ISS cameras. It also needs to secure interim financing for short- term liquidity, as well as longterm funding for its major projects. The court granted Urthecast the ability to start looking for a buyer for the ISS cameras.

That may include a stalking- horse bid of US$ 10,000 each by the interim lender. It may not be easy to find a buyer, and the deal may not be lucrative. “Commercial and operationa­l issues related to the ISS Cameras have resulted in the terminatio­n of the access and operation agreement with Urthecast’s Russian operating partner on the ISS, and the Urthecast Group has not been able to access its ISS Cameras since November 2016,” according to court documents.

Urthecast’s other primary tangible assets are the two satellites, Deimos-1 and Deimos- 2. The company previously attempted to find a buyer for these in an effort to help address its financial challenges.

It received several bids and engaged in further due diligence with one of the potential buyers, “but ultimately could not complete the sale due to regulatory constraint­s in its country.” It re-engaged with another bidder, but did not provide further informatio­n in the court document.

The court has also granted Urthecast an initial debtor- in- possession financing facility of up to US$1 million, and then up to US$ 5 million more. It has extended the stay of proceeding­s until Dec. 18.

 ?? Courtesy Urthecast ?? An image of Vancouver taken from the Urthecast satellite, which is trying to get two delayed projects airborne.
Courtesy Urthecast An image of Vancouver taken from the Urthecast satellite, which is trying to get two delayed projects airborne.
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