SpaceX and Dish Network continue lobbing broadsides at one another on SpaceX's plans for limited supplemental coverage from space (SCS) service in the G-block spectrum. In a docket 23-135 filing Tuesday, SpaceX labeled Dish criticisms "baseless fearmongering" and part of its "standard fare of misdirection and misinformation." Dish has petitioned the FCC to reconsider its Space Bureau decision allowing SpaceX to conduct limited SCS operations over the G block (see 2401040005). SpaceX said while Dish attacks its out-of-band emissions, SpaceX operations have been proven to readily fall below the noise floor of adjacent band users. Dish said SpaceX's response to the petition (see 2401180061) reinforced rather than countered concerns about harmful interference to Dish's adjacent H-block operations and to mobile satellite service uplinks worldwide. Pointing to SpaceX statements that testing will show its SCS service won't cause interference, Dish said the need for "a bespoke test" as proof "demonstrates all by itself that the risk of interference is likely too high."
During a session with FCC staff, DirecTV reiterated its criticism of Dish Network's study that purports to show no serious interference risks from terrestrial use of the 12 GHz band (see 2312270045). In a docket 20-443 filing Monday recapping a meeting with the Space and Wireless bureaus and Office of Engineering and Technology staffers, DirecTV said the study didn't consider its direct broadcast satellite antennas that terrestrial operators would need to protect. DirecTV said because it constantly broadcasts on the full 500 MHz of 12 GHz spectrum to deliver service, it "is always 'talking,'” meaning there is no way to use “listen before talk” strategies to allow other systems to share the band.
Skylo Technologies launched SMS-based texting capabilities on its satellite network, it said Monday. The capability lays the groundwork for a planned rollout of two-way voice calls and images on its network, it added.
Eutelsat expects revenue growth in its geostationary orbit business during fiscal year 2023-2024, thanks to Eutelsat 10B and Konnect VHTS satellites entering service, it told investors Monday. But non-geostationary orbit revenue is lagging projections, it said. While OneWeb has 100% of its satellites in place and a backlog of $1.1 billion at the end of last quarter, availability of the ground network is delayed, it said. That delay affects revenue, particularly in mobility and certain geographies, Eutelsat said. In addition, it said, the ground network should be 90% complete in Q2 2024.
Airbus purchased Eutelsat/OneWeb's stake in the companies' satellite manufacturing joint venture, including the JV's Florida manufacturing facility, Airbus said Monday. Airbus said it will continue manufacturing small satellites for customers. Financial terms weren't disclosed.
Before authorizing any supplemental coverage from space (SCS) operation, the FCC must ensure incumbents operating in the same bands won't suffer harmful interference, EchoStar representatives urged during meetings with leaders of the Space and Wireless bureaus. In a Space Bureau filing Friday recapping a meeting with Bureau Chief Julie Kearney and Wireless Bureau Chief Joel Taubenblatt, EchoStar said interference protection also must extend to adjacent bands and other geographies. No SCS technical rules can be finalized before studies showing these technical requirements will address co-channel, adjacent channel and adjacent geography interference, it said. Alternately, SCS applications could be required to submit evidence subject to public comment showing that there wouldn't be harmful interference, EchoStar said. SCS use of terrestrial spectrum in the U.S. should require consent from, and appropriate lease agreements with, the terrestrial licensee as well as the licensee with a meaningful role in managing interference, it said.
2024 should bring more vertical and horizontal consolidation across the satcom industry as well as major moves in AI integration, Analysys Mason's Vivek Prasad blogged Wednesday. He said EchoStar's Jupiter-3 will drive geostationary orbit market growth in the Americas, while SpaceX's Starlink broadband growth will slow versus 2023 as it expands in emerging economies where average revenue per user is lower. Prasad predicted Eutelsat/OneWeb will make inroads in the enterprise very small aperture and backhaul markets, while Amazon will likely launch Kuiper satellites in earnest this year. He said big demand drivers in satcom this year will include network upgrades and expansion in backhaul and trunking as well as autonomous maritime platforms and unmanned aerial systems. While the video market's size will continue its slide, it will remain the largest single source of satcom market revenue, he said.
On-orbit services companies Orbit Fab and ClearSpace will partner on in-space refueling offerings, they said Wednesday. Under a memorandum of understanding, they will create refueling space architecture that uses an Orbit Fab fuel depot and ClearSpace refueling shuttle, they said.
The satellite communications user terminals market should reach $238 billion by 2030, ABI Research said Tuesday. That market includes traditional very small aperture terminals (VSAT), broadband global area network terminals, satellite phones and 5G mobile devices, it said. Andrew Cavalier, satellite communications senior analyst, said SpaceX and Amazon's Kuiper will be the front-runners in satellite broadband due to their low cost, flat panel terminals. ABI said by 2030, annual shipments of flat panel VSAT terminals should reach 2 million annually.
An update to the FCC's international communications filing system (ICFS) is "about 85% there" and should rollout in the second half of the year, Space Bureau Chief of Staff Kerry Murray said Tuesday. At an FCBA event where 2024 priorities were discussed, Murray said the bureau is working with software developers on updating the system, which dates back to the 1990s. Murray said there will likely be a move this year to refresh the record on earth stations in motion for non-geostationary orbit satellites. Deputy Bureau Chief Jennifer Gilsenan said the bureau also hopes this year to focus on finalized rules for NGSO operations in the 17 GHz band. Pointing to April's NGSO fixed satellite service sharing order and Further NPRM (see 2304200039), she said finishing that proceeding is also a 2024 priority. Gilsenan said the bureau is working with the Wireless and other bureaus on a supplemental coverage from space framework; an SLS NPRM was adopted in March (see 2303160009). Associate Bureau Chief Stephen Duall said that in-space servicing, assembly manufacturing is "very much on our radar" for 2024, following the 2022 ISAM notice of inquiry (see 2208050023). He said September's satellite application streamlining item (see 2309210055) was part of a longer initiative that the bureau continues to work toward. Asked about better coordination with NTIA when it comes to frequency bands also used by federal users, Murray said the ICFS modernization should help with that. "The technology is the problem," she said. The ICFS update should make the system more user-friendly by incorporating such capabilities as auto population of fields. Bureau Chief Julie Kearney said among the chief complaints the bureau receives are those about the ICFS.