PARIS โ€” Satellite television provider Dish Network on Feb. 1 announced it has agreed to purchase struggling satellite-terrestrial wireless broadband provider DBSD North America, formerly called ICO North America, for $1 billion subject to adjustments.

Reston, Va.-based DBSD, whose S-band satellite and planned terrestrial network foundered on a lack of financing, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in May 2009. It said during bankruptcy proceedings that to launch a second spacecraft similar to the little-used satellite, in orbit since April 2008, would cost $300 million, and that to roll out a network of terrestrial signal relays for nationwide coverage in the United States would cost between $300 million and $800 million.

In September 2009, Englewood, Colo.-based Dish made a surprise investment of about $45 million in DBSDโ€™s debt, setting Dish up to become the companyโ€™s principal owner as it exits Chapter 11.

Dish at the time had battled other DBSD ownersโ€™ attempts to reorganize the company based on what Dish said were wildly optimistic projections of its likely success. The likelihood of a return to bankruptcy for what Dish labeled โ€œan inherently risky telecommunications investmentโ€ was a concern, Dish said at the time.

Dishโ€™s Feb. 1 announcement said it has proposed to the U.S. bankruptcy court handling the DBSD case that Dish lend DBSD $87.5 million in debtor-in-possession funds. The agreement to purchase 100 percent of DBSDโ€™s equity, Dish said, is subject โ€œto certain agreements, including interest accruing on DBSD North Americaโ€™s existing debt.โ€ The deal is also subject to U.S. regulatory approval, and to DBSDโ€™s satisfactory emergence from Chapter 11, Dish said.

The Dish-DBSD agreement comes less than a week after the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted DBSD competitor LightSquared a major waiver to the operating conditions that heretofore had been attached to licenses to use satellite spectrum for terrestrial wireless links.

The FCC ruled that LightSquaredโ€™s wholesale customers could sell terrestrial-only handsets alongside the dual-mode and satellite-only terminals. Although DBSD operates in S-band โ€” LightSquared operates in L-band โ€” the logic for DBSD seeking a similar waiver would appear compelling and may have caused the companyโ€™s value to climb appreciably in Dishโ€™s evaluation.

Peter B. de Selding was the Paris bureau chief for SpaceNews.