Satellites in the News

It seems like there is daily news concerning satellites used for broadband and telecommunications. Following are a sampling of some of the recent announcements.

Starlink Outage. Starlink experienced a worldwide 2.5-hour network outage on July 23 that was blamed on “key internal software services that operate the core network”. This raises questions about using satellite broadband for mission-critical uses, such as for military field operations.

T-Mobile Satellite Texting. T-Mobile has been plastering the airwaves with ads that tout the ability of T-Mobile customers to use its satellites to send text messages from remote locations. The service is available free to T-Mobile cellular and broadband customers and is available to others for $10 per month. T-Mobile enabled the service for free to everybody in the Kerr County, Texas area after the recent flooding, and the company said it would do the same for future disasters. The company says that by the end of the year, 911 texting will be available to all cellphone customers in the U.S., regardless of their subscribed carrier.

Project Kuiper. The company is now in the deployment phase of its satellite constellation that will compete with Starlink. The latest launch of 27 satellites brought the number of deployed satellites to 102. The company has scheduled 80 more launches and believes it can begin offering some commercial services by the end of this year. The first planned constellation will consist of 3,236 satellites.

Echostar. The company announced a deal with MDA Space to launch 200 satellites that will provide cellphone service from satellites by 2029. The satellite constellation would use Echostar’s existing 2 GHz AWS-4 spectrum, which they hope will justify keeping the spectrum.

AST SpaceMobile. The company has asked the FCC to launch 243 additional satellites by 2028 that would provide cellular service in direct competition with T-Mobile (and possibly Echostar). The new satellites have a large antenna array of 223 square meters.

New Regulations. The FCC voted on August 7 to accelerate the licensing process for new proposed satellite launches. This was done to keep pace with the explosive growth of the space economy. This implies even more satellites in low orbits, making the space increasingly crowded. As of July 2024, there were over 11,000 satellites in space, with over 10,000 that are active. There are worldwide plans to have as many as 100,000 satellites in orbit by 2030, the vast majority in low-orbit space.

Spectrum. The FCC is in the process of considering four new spectrum bands for satellites. This includes spectrum from 12.7-13.25 GHz, 42-42.5 GHz, 51.4-52.4 GHz, and the “W-band” that includes various ranges including 92.0-94.0 GHz, 94.1-100 GHz, 102.0-109.5 GHz, and 111.8-114.25 GHz. Altogether this is over 200,000 Megahertz of spectrum. The FCC is also considering increasing the power limits on some of the spectrum, which would greatly increase bandwidth utilization. There are some concerns about overuse of some of the proposed bands. For example, meteorologists are warning about overallocation of spectrum in the 52 GHz band.

BEAD Grants. It seems obvious with announcements from some state broadband offices that the amount of the BEAD grants allocated to satellite broadband will increase significantly. There should be some pronouncements coming of grant awards within a month or so, depending on any bottleneck at the NTIA when it tries to process BEAD grants from all states at nearly the same time.

2 thoughts on “Satellites in the News

  1. Doug, don’t you think the fiber community has to be cautiously optimistic given Virginia and Louisiana’s BOB awards?

    • It’s too early to say. Those two states took an aggressive posture and kept a lot of awards for fiber. Other states are adhering closer to NTIA guidelines and are going to award a lot less to fiber out of the gate. And the awards in Virginia and Louisiana are still not final until blessed by NTIA. Still a waiting game.

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