Israel to subsidize development of Amos-8 ‎communications satellite ‎

Amos-8 will be developed by Spacecom and the Israel ‎Aerospace Industries and built entirely in Israel.‎

The Israeli government confirmed Monday that it ‎plans to subsidize the development of Spacecom ‎Satellite Communications' Amos-8 ‎satellite.‎

The announcement came two years after the company ‎lost the Amos-6 satellite, which was destroyed when ‎an explosion engulfed a Falcon 9 SpaceX rocket ‎carrying it ‎during a routine test at Cape Canaveral ‎Airbase in ‎Florida.

The explosion occurred two days before the ‎satellite ‎was scheduled to be launched into orbit, where it ‎was slated to replace the aging Amos-2 ‎communications satellite, launched into orbit in ‎‎2003.‎

In February 2017, Spacecom successfully launched the ‎Amos-7 communications satellite into space to ‎replace Amos-2 and provide service to clients in ‎Europe, Africa and the Middle East. ‎

Amos-8 will be developed by Spacecom and the Israel ‎Aerospace Industries and built entirely in Israel.‎

The cost of ‎developing Amos-8 was previously estimated at ‎‎$220 million but Spacecom claimed that the price was ‎too high and suspended its plans to develop the ‎satellite.‎

According to industry insiders, the government's ‎announcement that it would subsidize the project to ‎ensure the satellite is manufactured locally is ‎meant to shore up the Israeli space industry, which ‎suffered a massive blow with the 2016 destruction of ‎Amos-6 on the heels of losing the Amos-5 ‎communications satellite the previous year. ‎

Amos-5 was launched into orbit in 2011 but ‎communication was lost in November 2015.‎

‎"This decision has long-term strategic implications ‎that meet Israel's vital, existential needs," Science ‎and Technology Minister Ofir Akunis said Monday.‎

‎"The development and manufacture of the satellite in ‎Israel will allow us to maintain complete ‎independence in the field of satellite ‎communications. Its construction in Israel will ‎preserve knowledge and expertise in the field that ‎have been acquired over the course of ‎decades."‎

Akunis further noted that the government's decision ‎was in line with the recommendations submitted by a special ‎committee established by his ministry in the wake of the loss of Amos-6.‎

‎"This decision is another step in implementing the ‎committee's findings, as submitted shortly after the ‎disastrous loss of Amos-6," he said.‎

According to the recommendations, the most ‎cost-effective operational model that would meet ‎Israel's needs is a commercial ‎communications satellite that would be manufactured ‎and operated by an Israeli company.

The committee further said that as the cost of ‎Israeli-made communications satellites was higher ‎than their cost in the global market, it was imperative to develop the necessary infrastructures and ‎capabilities to bridge the cost gap.‎

Director General of the Science and Technology ‎Ministry Peretz Vazan noted that "the technological ‎knowledge that we will accumulate as part of ‎developing this project will improve the Israeli ‎space industry's position as a whole as well as its ‎ability to compete in the global market."‎

IAI Chairman Harel Locker welcomed the government's ‎announcement, saying, "Developing communications ‎satellites is part of Israel's strategic interest. ‎We must preserve Israel's independent capabilities ‎in this field."‎