SES ASTRA, an SES company, announces that its satellite ASTRA 5A, the former SIRIUS 2 operating at 31.5 degrees East, experienced a technical anomaly leading to the end of the spacecrafts mission. SES ASTRA has immediately informed affected customers and switched a substantial part of the traffic to another ASTRA satellite at the 23.5 degrees East orbital position. The service for the German cable operators through their company KDL is among the transferred services. With this transfer, the economic impact of the incident on SES in 2009 will not be material. The teams of the Swedish Space Corporation (SSC), the company that technically operates ASTRA 5A, and the satellite's manufacturer, Thales Alenia Space, are now working closely on de-orbiting the satellite. Together with SES, they are also investigating the root cause of the incident. ASTRA 5A was positioned at the orbital position 31.5 degrees East and launched as SIRIUS 2 in November 1997 to the 5 degrees East position. SES ASTRA will shortly take the necessary decisions to maintain and develop the 31.5 degrees East orbital position in the changed fleet deployment scenario.
On Oct 27 SES president and CEO Romain Bausch had said that Astra 5A, which should have been operating from 31.5 deg East, had suffered a few problems and that "human error" could not be ruled out. Now, happily, Astra 5A (also known as Sirius 2) has been recovered and is back on station, and working "nominally".