Sprint LTE ally LightSquared and satellite company Inmarsat
are publically airing a dispute, the latest trouble that the hopeful 4G network
has come into.
Inmarsat announced in a Feb. 20 press
release that LightSquared has failed to make a $56.25 million payment, due upon
completion of a "Phase 1 transition." Consequently, Inmarsat has
issued a notice of default to LightSquared, in keeping with the terms of the
pair's agreement.
The notice starts the clock on a 60-day period during which
LightSquared can "remedy" the payment, said the statement,
"before Inmarsat is entitled to enforce its rights and remedies... "
LightSquared, in its own Feb. 20 statement, said not so fast. While it has received the default notice, it
believes all the Phase 1 conditions have not yet been met.
"LightSquared has raised several matters that require
resolution before the first phase comes to a close," according to the company’s
statement. "The terms of the agreement allow for additional time to
resolve pending questions before phase one is complete and the final payment is
due."
Funded by billionaire Philip Falcone's Harbinger Capital
Partners investment company, LightSquared first announce plans to launch an LTE
network in July 2010, using untraditional spectrum that was originally
allotted for public safety purposes and allows for the simultaneous use of
cellular and satellite services.
LightSquared's initiative has been plagued, however, by
reports that its network interferes with the signals sent to GPS devices. In
December 2011, Bloomberg News leaked
the results of tests reportedly showing the network to, despite adjustments,
still knock out a "great majority" of GPS devices.
LightSquared CEO Sajiv Ahuja came out swinging, writing
letters to the Departments of Defense and Transportation, insisting the tests
were biased and calling on an investigation into the source of the leaked
report.
In January, the National Space-based Positioning, Navigation
and Timing Executive Committee told the Commerce Department that testing still
found the LightSquared network to interfere with GPS signals, and additional
testing wasn't necessary, since the problem was not correctable.
LightSquared soon after held a conference call, insisting
that government agency had rigged its test and set them up for failure.
On Feb. 1, Sprint, which has a 15-year deal with
LightSquared worth more than $9 billion, announced it would give the latter
another 30 days to receive approval from the Federal Communications Commission.
On Feb. 14, however, the FCC
said it would not lift a prohibition on LightSquared, following a letter
from the Federal Aviation Administration stating that the LightSquared network
would interfere with aviation safety-of-flight systems, with no immediate or
pending resolution to be found.
In a Feb. 15 statement on the FCC announcement, LightSquared
mimicked some phrasing of AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson, responding the FCC's
findings against AT&T's proposed purchase of T-Mobile.
"The government decided to choose winners and
losers," said the statement. "Politicians, rather than engineers and
scientists, dictated the solution to the problem from Washington."
The statement went on to further echo AT&T complaints
that the federal government is intent on hampering progress and preventing U.S.
innovation and the creation of jobs. LightSquared wrote:
...[With] its action yesterday, the
FCC has harmed not only LightSquared, but also the American public by making it
impossible to build out a system that would meet public policy goals of
successive administrations.
... After years of receiving
regulatory approvals, the FCC approved LightSquared to build its ground network
in 2005. In 2010, the FCC amended that plan, requiring LightSquared to build a
national broadband network that reached 260 million Americans. ... Yesterday,
after LightSquared had already spent nearly $4 billion, the FCC changed its
mind. There can be no more devastating blow to private industry and confidence
in the consistency of the FCC’s decision-making process.
In its Feb. 20 statement regarding its disagreement in
Inmarsat, LightSquared said it was "still committed" to it wireless
broadband business plan and expects that Inmarsat will remain an important
partner.