Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Satellite-to-phone rules advance

Market for direct-link calling said to be worth up to $30B

- TODD SHIELDS

regulators gave preliminar­y approval to rules allowing phone calls via direct links to satellites, a potential $30 billion market that’s attracted Elon Musk’s SpaceX and competitor­s including AT&T partner AST SpaceMobil­e.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission on a 4-0 vote Thursday tentativel­y approved regulation­s for the service, which would expand mobile phone reception to places beyond cell coverage, offering access in remote areas. The rules won’t become final before a second vote that wasn’t immediatel­y scheduled.

“By providing clear rules, I believe we can kick-start more innovation in the space economy while also expanding wireless coverage in remote, unserved and underserve­d areas,” FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworce­l said before the vote at the agency’s monthly meeting in Washington. “We can make mobile dead zones a thing of the past.”

Companies including Iridium Communicat­ions have long offered connection­s directly between handheld devices and satellites using expensive specialize­d equipment. The new services aim to offer connection­s using normal consumer mobile phones.

Phone coverage directly from space, a yearslong aspiration, is coming closer to reality. Musk’s Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es plans to test calls via orbit this year as part of a partnershi­p with TMobile US, Jonathan Hofeller, vice president of commercial sales at SpaceX’s Starlink unit, said at a conference March 13.

The FCC changed draft language that proposed barring the use of frequencie­s eyed for calls-via-satellite by AT&T and Midland, Texasbased start-up AST SpaceMobil­e, and now seeks comments on allowing their use, agency staff said in a news conference. Those airwaves are assigned to FirstNet, a wireless network for public safety officials operated by

AT&T.

In filings, AT&T and AST SpaceMobil­e had asked the FCC to allow direct-to-satellite service on the FirstNet airwaves, which are being used to test the service.

“We support the FCC’s efforts to allow mobile networks to integrate supplement­al satellite coverage,” AT&T said in an emailed statement. “We look forward to participat­ing in the developmen­t of rules that facilitate increased coverage and foster competitio­n.”

Direct-to-satellite proponents plan to offer coverage when the world’s estimated 5 billion mobile phones stray from cell coverage areas. And they expect to offer service in places with no nearby cell signal at all, such as in remote mountains or far out at sea.

Industrywi­de revenue for such connectivi­ty could reach $30 billion by 2035, or about 3% of total industry revenue, GSMA, a mobile industry body, said last year.

 ?? ?? A man walks out of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission headquarte­rs in Washington, D.C. The agency gave initial approval this week of new rules to allow satellite-based phone service.
A man walks out of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission headquarte­rs in Washington, D.C. The agency gave initial approval this week of new rules to allow satellite-based phone service.

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