The Daily Telegraph

How infighting and chaos scuppered race to build a UK space champion

A French firm with links to Russia and China is taking over Oneweb,

- write Oliver Gill and Matthew Field

Kanal PIK, a Georgian television channel, lasted just a fortnight before it was taken off air by the Kremlin. It was 16 months after Russian tanks rolled into South Ossetia, in Vladimir Putin’s brutal campaign on the former Soviet state, and hopes had been high that an independen­t Russian-speaking broadcaste­r could survive following a ceasefire in August 2009.

Kanal PIK had signed a five-year deal with French satellite operator Eutelsat to beam their broadcasts into the Caucasus region, but it was not long before media executives sensed things were going awry.

“First we received informatio­n that they had problems with our content,” said public television head Gia Chanturia. “Then they said it was a technical issue. Then they said it wasn’t a technical problem but a commercial issue.”

Eutelsat had stopped transmitti­ng the channel after signing a “lucrative contract” with Russian satellite company Intersputn­ik – one that promised the Georgian channel’s space to Kremlin-controlled Gazprom Media Group, representa­tives claimed.

The French company was a “tool of Russian censorship”, the channel said in a statement to AFP news agency. Eutelsat denied it had been pressured by Moscow.

Fast-forward more than a decade and Paris-listed Eutelsat is on the cusp of seizing control of rival satellite company Oneweb. The company was rescued by British taxpayers in 2020 to “put the UK at the forefront of space tech”, according to Boris Johnson, and take on Elon Musk’s Starlink.

From a purely business perspectiv­e, even critics of the deal concede the takeover – or “merger” as it is officially being billed – makes sense.

Eutelsat owns 23pc of Oneweb and the two companies already work closely together on a series of contracts. Both are loss-making and the British Government has already signalled it is not prepared to pump more money into Oneweb. In addition, Britain will retain its “golden share” with a series of commitment­s that are more substantia­l “than Rolls-royce and BT”, Government sources insist. Oneweb’s headquarte­rs cannot be moved from Britain, which would have the right of veto on lucrative satellite building contracts.

“The rationale for consolidat­ion is strong,” says one industry source. “There is a logic to it, but Eutelsat and Oneweb merging is a much iffier propositio­n … Oneweb is unproven and is competing against some tough rivals. Getting support from the EU is probably pretty smart.”

But the issues are more geopolitic­al. Simply put: the British Government is going to end up with its enemies, critics say.

Eutelsat has made little secret of continuing to support Russian media, leaving it open to allegation­s it is helping the Kremlin’s propaganda machine. Some 6.3pc of the French company’s revenue is generated in Russia, Eutelsat’s finance chief Sandrine Téran told analysts in May – and the money is paid in roubles.

“We are in a position to keep on delivering the service to our Russian customers who are not subject to sanctions,” she says

There is also a question mark over ownership. The UK Government’s 18pc stake, bought for £400m, would reduce to 9pc in the enlarged company. It would sit beside a shareholdi­ng of between 2.5pc and 3pc owned by China – the country that Tory leadership hopeful Rishi Sunak says “represents the largest threat to Britain and the world’s security”.

“The China piece will create a real issue for the US,” the industry source says. “From a competitio­n standpoint it’s probably not a big deal. From a security standpoint it’s a big deal.”

The question of why Britain wants to sell up after Johnson was so effusive two years ago is comparativ­ely straightfo­rward, insiders say.

With Dominic Cummings, Johnson’s former chief adviser, out of the picture and the PM on his way out, here was the chance for Whitehall to get rid of an investment many mandarins never wanted in the first place.

Ben Wallace, the Defence Secretary, was also reportedly not in favour of taking a stake in the company. “The Ministry of Defence wasn’t planning to use it,” one senior official told the

‘Oneweb isn’t run very well. Half the execs see it as a science project and the other half don’t really understand the market’

Financial Times. “Ben always thought it was a fantasy by Cummings because he was obsessed about space.”

Oneweb insiders complained that they were not taken seriously in Whitehall. “Getting any traction from government department­s was very difficult,” says one source. “And when you did, they expected Oneweb to give away its services for free.”

Another claims: “Oneweb isn’t run very well. Half the execs see it as a science project and the other half don’t really understand the market.”

Whether it be from the British Government, the Oneweb boardroom or even from across the English Channel at Eutelsat, there has been a “high level of naivety” as to the geopolitic­al implicatio­ns of the UK selling up. The UK will have a seat on the Eutelsat board, alongside a representa­tive from the French government. It remains to be seen whether the Chinese – Eutelsat’s fourth-biggest investor – will also demand a representa­tive.

Meanwhile, it seems unlikely that British taxpayers would be happy to go along with accepting roubles while Russia continues to attack Ukraine.

Whitehall officials said Oneweb’s technology would be ring-fenced to ensure it is not used to support channels that facilitate Kremlin propaganda. This notion was scoffed at by company insiders. “It’s not about ring-fencing the technology – the US would never let it be used in Russia anyway,” one says. “At the very least, the UK is still going to be a shareholde­r in a company working with Russia.”

‘At the very least, the UK is still going to be a shareholde­r in a company working with Russia’

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom