TAMPA, Fla. โ€” Israeli satellite operator Spacecom is adjusting its business to serve maritime customers as the market shows signs of recovering from the pandemic.

Spacecom said May 12 it has redirected a Ku-band beam on its AMOS-17 satellite to the Indian Ocean for future growth opportunities after securing its first maritime customer.

This customer is using AMOS-17โ€™s Ka-band to connect superyachts in the Indian Ocean, according to a Spacecom executive, who said the redirected Ku-band enables the operator to provide up to 2 gigabits per second of capacity over the region.

The Ku-band transponder is one of 18 aboard AMOS-17 and previously offered services over east and southern Africa across land and sea, said Ofer Asif, Spacecomโ€™s senior vice president of business development, strategy and marketing.

โ€œWith the increasing demand for maritime services over east Africa and the Indian Ocean, we moved the land customers to the AMOS-7 satellite and re-pointed the AMOS-17 beam to cover the Indian Ocean Region,โ€ Asif told SpaceNews.

AMOS-17 is Spacecomโ€™s newest satellite and was launched in 2019 to provide broadcast and broadband services across sub-Saharan Africa, Europe, the Middle East and parts of Asia.

AMOS-7 is a satellite Spacecom is leasing from Hong Kong-based AsiaSat under a deal forged in 2016 to fill a coverage gap left by AMOS-6, which was destroyed after a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket preparing to launch it exploded during a fueling test.

โ€œSpacecom is working on all aspects of the maritime market from superyachts and commercial vessels, to container ships, to oil & gas platforms to regular shipping and also for security applications.โ€ Asif added.

Large cruise vessels and more than 60% of passenger cruises resumed service in 2021 after being forced aground by pandemic-related travel restrictions, according to an annual report on the maritime market released Apri 20 by Euroconsult analysts.

More maritime traffic helped the number of active very-small-aperture (VSAT) terminals to increase by 32% to 31,100 terminals in 2021 compared with 2020.

However, the market still has โ€œa long way to go to reach pre-pandemic levels,โ€ Euroconsult added, as the industry continues to feel the pressure of lengthy restrictions on international travel.

Spacecomโ€™s diversification strategy comes after 4iG, a Hungarian IT and communications company, announced plans in June to buy 51% of Spacecom and build out its portfolio of services.

Israeli government concerns about Spacecomโ€™s satellites coming under foreign control and 4iGโ€™s ties to Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban have been delaying the dealโ€™s closure, the Jerusalem Post reported in January.

Jason Rainbow writes about satellite telecom, finance and commercial markets for SpaceNews. He has spent more than a decade covering the global space industry as a business journalist. Previously, he was Group Editor-in-Chief for Finance Information Group,...