Agreement with Telecom NZ completes
Global Xpress satellite access station
network
24 September 2013
Inmarsat announced that Telecom, New
Zealand’s largest telecommunications and
IT services provider, has been awarded
the contract to establish and manage one
of
Inmarsat’s
Pacific Ocean Region (POR) satellite
access stations (SAS) for Global Xpress
(GX).
The contract
for this POR GX SAS marks an important
milestone in the development and
deployment of Inmarsat’s market-changing
GX network, which will deliver the
world’s first global Ka-band network,
providing mobile users with true
broadband speeds of up to 50Mbps.
Telecom will
develop its Warkworth Satellite Earth
Station, located near Auckland on New
Zealand’s North Island, to host Inmarsat
and its GX satellite antenna. Warkworth
will act as a co-primary GX SAS for the
POR, alongside Inmarsat’s own Land Earth
Station and Teleport based in Auckland.
Both will act as gateways between the
broadband traffic routed via the POR
satellite and terrestrial fixed
networks.
"We’re pleased
to be a part of Inmarsat’s vision of
better connectivity for New Zealand,"
said Nick Clarke, Telecom’s GM Wholesale
and International. “The scale of this
project reinforces that New Zealand can
meet demand for security of
international bandwidth supply at
competitive prices. In choosing a
location for a satellite earth station
it needs to be cost-effective and have
reliable connectivity to the rest of the
world. Given the scale, we had to prove
our capability at our Satellite Earth
Station as well as our National
Transport Service, which will backhaul
the satellite data when it hits earth
and carry it internationally on the
Southern Cross Cable."
“The GX
development programme is on time and on
budget,” said Leo Mondale, Managing
Director, Growth Management & Support
(GMS), Inmarsat. “The sites for all six
GX satellite access stations have now
been selected and operational readiness
is well advanced on the stations
supporting our first Inmarsat-5
satellite serving the Indian Ocean
Region, which we expect to launch around
the turn of the year.”
The full
Inmarsat-5 constellation is on course to
deployed by the end of 2014, providing a
single global broadband service which
can be accessed by users on land, at sea
and in the air. The satellites are
currently under construction or testing
at Boeing Space and Intelligence
Systems’ (S&IS) El Segundo facility in
California.
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