Dish Network 2013 Annual Report Download - page 136

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DISH NETWORK CORPORATION
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS - Continued
F-26
In the event of a failure or loss of any of our satellites, we may need to acquire or lease additional satellite capacity
or relocate one of our other satellites and use it as a replacement for the failed or lost satellite. Such a failure could
result in a prolonged loss of critical programming or a significant delay in our plans to expand programming as
necessary to remain competitive and thus may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition
and results of operations.
Prior to 2013, certain of our satellites have experienced anomalies, some of which have had a significant adverse
impact on their remaining useful life and/or commercial operation. There can be no assurance that future anomalies
will not impact the remaining useful life and/or commercial operation of any of the satellites in our fleet. See Note
2 “Long-Lived Assets” for further discussion of evaluation of impairment. There can be no assurance that we can
recover critical transmission capacity in the event one or more of our in-orbit satellites were to fail. We generally
do not carry commercial insurance for any of the in-orbit satellites that we use, other than certain satellites leased
from third parties, and therefore, we will bear the risk associated with any uninsured in-orbit satellite failures.
Recent developments with respect to certain of our satellites are discussed below.
Leased Satellites
EchoStar XII. Prior to 2010, EchoStar XII experienced anomalies resulting in the loss of electrical power available
from its solar arrays, which reduced the number of transponders that could be operated. In September 2012,
November 2012, and January 2013, EchoStar XII experienced additional solar array anomalies, which further
reduced the electrical power available. During the third quarter 2013, EchoStar informed us that EchoStar XII will
likely experience further loss of available electrical power that will impact its operational capability, and EchoStar
reduced the remaining estimated useful life of the satellite to 18 months. Pursuant to our satellite lease agreement
with EchoStar, we are entitled to a reduction in our monthly recurring lease payments in the event of a partial loss of
satellite capacity or complete failure of the satellite. Since the number of useable transponders on EchoStar XII
depends on, among other things, whether EchoStar XII is operated in CONUS which provides service to the
continental United States, spot beam, or hybrid CONUS/spot beam mode, we are unable to determine at this time
the actual number of transponders that will be available at any given time or how many transponders can be used
during the remaining estimated life of the satellite. This satellite is currently not in service and serves as an in-orbit
spare.
FCC Authorizations
As of December 31, 2013 and 2012, our FCC Authorizations consisted of the following:
2013 2012
DBS Licenses........................................ 611,794$ 611,794$
MVDDS................................................ 24,000 24,000
700 MHz Licenses................................. 711,871 711,871
AWS Licenses....................................... 1,949,000 1,949,000
Total ........................................................ 3,296,665$ 3,296,665$
As of December 31,
(In thousands)
In 2008, we acquired certain 700 MHz wireless spectrum licenses, which were granted to us by the FCC in February
2009. In addition, on March 9, 2012, we completed the DBSD Transaction and the TerreStar Transaction, pursuant
to which we acquired the AWS-4 licenses held by DBSD North America and TerreStar. These licenses are subject
to certain interim and final build-out requirements.