Lockheed Martin to Sell ILS Stake to Board Member

PARIS-The man who is buying Lockheed Martin's majority stake in International Launch Services (ILS) says he expects to manage the business with little or no changes and that he made the purchase based solely on the company's  financial prospects.

Mario Lemme, the founder of Space Transport Inc. of the British Virgin Islands, a company established to manage the ILS investment, said he used his own personal resources to arrange the deal and has no partners for the moment. The deal had been in negotiations for the last three to four months.

"I have spent much of my life in Russia and have been involved with the launch business for many years-it's what I know," Lemme said in a Sept. 8 interview. "I have been managing the relationship between ILS and the Russian side since the beginning and I know the financial prospects."

Lemme, a German national who has been on the ILS board of directors for the past three years, is president of Weissker Inc. of Moscow, a company that has been working with ILS and Lockheed Martin to smooth the considerable paperwork necessary to export U.S. satellite hardware to Kazakhstan-Proton's launch site is there-for launch on a Russian rocket.

Lemme said Space Transport will be offering all of ILS's 70 employees contracts whose conditions will be broadly equivalent to what has been offered by Lockheed Martin.

"All that licensing expertise and legal expertise is in ILS," Lemme said. "I fully expect all ILS employees, or at least the vast majority of them, to stay with the company."

Lemme said there may be ways to reduce production costs at Proton's prime contractor, Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center of Moscow. Like all Russian companies, Khrunichev has witnessed a sharp increase in the costs of its raw materials in recent months, putting pressure on the profitability of ILS.

Alexander Bobrenev, a Khrunichev spokesman, said Sept. 8 that Khrunichev does not view the Lockheed Martin exit as a disruptive event to ILS's business. In a Sept. 7 press release, Khrunichev said marketing of the Proton and planned Angara rockets will continue and that "responsibilities for future development of this business will be assumed by the Russian side."

As Khrunichev's costs have risen and as the commercial launch market has improved, commercial launch prices have risen. Lockheed Martin has said in filings to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and in quarterly reports to investors, that ILS is profitable. The company does not break out ILS results separately.

"Financially this is an attractive investment,"

Lemme said. "I want to return the Proton vehicle to the premium status it had a decade ago. We have a healthy manifest and prospects are good as the market recovers. We don't see any problem with the cash flow."

 Lemme said that once the Lockheed Martin sale concludes at the end of this year, ILS will be focusing on Proton, which has been ILS's workhorse vehicle in recent years as Atlas prices have placed that vehicle outside the range of most non-U.S. government customers.

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Charles Q. Choi
Contributing Writer

Charles Q. Choi is a contributing writer for Space.com and Live Science. He covers all things human origins and astronomy as well as physics, animals and general science topics. Charles has a Master of Arts degree from the University of Missouri-Columbia, School of Journalism and a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of South Florida. Charles has visited every continent on Earth, drinking rancid yak butter tea in Lhasa, snorkeling with sea lions in the Galapagos and even climbing an iceberg in Antarctica. Visit him at http://www.sciwriter.us