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New Delhi: An international tribunal has asked the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) to pay Bengaluru-based space technology firm Devas Multimedia Pvt. Ltd $672 million in damages for cancelling a contract four years ago on grounds of national security.
The ruling is a setback to Isro and the government, although the penalty is far short of the $1.6 billion Devas had sought in damages, calculated to include the value of its business, interest and costs, in the arbitration proceedings it initiated against Antrix Corporation Ltd, the commercial arm of Isro.
The ruling by the International Court of Arbitration (ICA) of the International Chamber of Commerce relates to a 28 January 2005 agreement between Devas and Antrix, under which Devas was to lease as much as 70Mhz of S-band spectrum from two satellites that were to be launched by Isro.
As part of the deal, Devas was to pay Antrix around $300 million for the right to use the spectrum for 12 years, extendable by an additional 12 years. Devas intended to use the spectrum to provide audio, video and broadband services using a mix of satellite and terrestrial technology.
The Cabinet Committee on Security called off the deal in 2011 after questions arose on whether the procedure followed by Antrix to allocate the airwaves was the most economically favourable possible for the exchequer. The committee scrapped the deal on the grounds that it was not in the security interests of the country.
The ruling will now have to be enforced by a court in India. For this purpose, a case has been registered in the Delhi high court and is expected to be listed for hearing on Wednesday.
The scrapping of the deal was seen as a fallout of the November 2010 report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) that fueled what is now commonly referred to as the 2G spectrum scam. The report alleged that a flawed 2G spectrum allocation process followed by the then United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government had led to a Rs1.76 trillion loss (in notional terms) to the exchequer.
Isro told to pay Devas $672 million in damages - Livemint
The ruling is a setback to Isro and the government, although the penalty is far short of the $1.6 billion Devas had sought in damages, calculated to include the value of its business, interest and costs, in the arbitration proceedings it initiated against Antrix Corporation Ltd, the commercial arm of Isro.
The ruling by the International Court of Arbitration (ICA) of the International Chamber of Commerce relates to a 28 January 2005 agreement between Devas and Antrix, under which Devas was to lease as much as 70Mhz of S-band spectrum from two satellites that were to be launched by Isro.
As part of the deal, Devas was to pay Antrix around $300 million for the right to use the spectrum for 12 years, extendable by an additional 12 years. Devas intended to use the spectrum to provide audio, video and broadband services using a mix of satellite and terrestrial technology.
The Cabinet Committee on Security called off the deal in 2011 after questions arose on whether the procedure followed by Antrix to allocate the airwaves was the most economically favourable possible for the exchequer. The committee scrapped the deal on the grounds that it was not in the security interests of the country.
The ruling will now have to be enforced by a court in India. For this purpose, a case has been registered in the Delhi high court and is expected to be listed for hearing on Wednesday.
The scrapping of the deal was seen as a fallout of the November 2010 report by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) that fueled what is now commonly referred to as the 2G spectrum scam. The report alleged that a flawed 2G spectrum allocation process followed by the then United Progressive Alliance (UPA) government had led to a Rs1.76 trillion loss (in notional terms) to the exchequer.
Isro told to pay Devas $672 million in damages - Livemint