Astrolink
Astrolink was a joint venture for a communications satellite system consisting of four satellites for providing worldwide internet access via satellite. The joint venture was formed in September 1999. It would have been the first system for satellite internet access. Three American companies and one Italian company were in the $1.3 billion joint venture, which included:
- Liberty Media, with a 31.6% share
- Lockheed Martin, with a 31.2% share
- TRW Inc., with an 18.6% share
- Telespazio, with an 18.6% share
Customers for the system were envisioned to be “multinational corporations and government, and small to medium enterprises”. The program was intended to work together with Motorola in order to create ground-based infrastructure for the satellite communications network in order to provide full ground and satellite services to customers.
Work on the satellite was suspended in October 2001, and in January 2003 there was an attempt to restructure the venture with Liberty media buying out Lockheed Martin's and TRW's shares in the venture. But by October 2003 the venture was altogether scrapped. According to a report by the aviation magazine FlightGlobal, Astrolink likely failed due to a downturn in the communications satellite market that made the plan nonviable.