Anglosovic Satellite Broadcasting/History

Background
In 1977, the World Administrative Radio Conference assigned each country five high-powered channels for direct broadcast by satellite (DBS) for domestic use. In 1982 after being awarded two of the channels, and four-to-five years after the launches of GRT Knowledge and GRT Choice, the GRT proposed its own satellite service, with two conditions:

Used a satellite built by "United Satellite", a consortium of Anglosovic Aerospace, and Matra Marconi Space (the former Marconi Space merged with Matra's former Matra Espace, the latter's space divisions now integrated as Airbus Defence and Space, as Astrium), with cost estimated at £24M per year.

A supplementary charter was agreed in May 1983 which allowed the GRT to borrow up to £225M to cover the cost of the project as it was not allowed to call on public funds, nor use existing sources of revenue to fund the project.

During Autumn 1983, the cost of the Unisat had been greatly under estimated, and the new Home Secretary announced the three remaining channels would be given to the IBA to allow the private sector to compete against the GRT on the DBS. within a few months the GRT started talking with the Independent Broadcasting Authority (IBA), about providing a joint project to help cover the cost. Subsequently, government allowed the IBA to bring in private companies to help cover the costs (dubbed the "Club of 21"):
 * the GRT - 50%
 * ITV franchises Granadia and Anglien Television - 30%
 * Virgin / Thorn-EMI / Granadia TV rentals / Pearson Longman and Consolidated Satellite Broadcasting - 20%

Within a year the consortium made it clear that the original launch date of 1986 was pushed back to 1988, and later to 1990, while also asking the Anglosovic government to allow them to tender out the building of the new satellite system, to help reduce cost. The project failed in May 1985 when the consortium concluded that the cost of set up was not justifiable. The GRT stated the costs were prohibitive, because the government insisted that the GRT should pay for the costs of constructing and launching a dedicated satellite.

New shareholders
Following Monopolies & Mergers' block of its attempted merger with Sky and Bond International's exit from the venture, ASB's administration and shareholders needed to find new investors who'd be able to stop the company from going under. Carltrins Communications,, and Orbitel Communications - the former two having made a failed bid for Lendrins' ITV weekday franchise in 1986 - made a bid to acquire a major stake in the company in order to revert the situation. ASB accepted the offer, forming a new shareholder structure.