Lynk Global Inc. Signs Contracts
with MNOs to Bring Satellite-Direct-to-Phone
Connectivity to Seven Pacific and Caribbean Island
Nations
February 23 2022
Lynk Global, Inc. has signed
multiple commercial contracts with Mobile Network
Operators (MNOs) covering seven island nations in the
Pacific and Caribbean, including with Telikom PNG in
Papua New Guinea’s (PNG) and bmobile in the Solomon
Islands. Lynk has seen a clear acceleration of contract
signings with island nations in response to the recent
disaster in Tonga.
Islands create many difficult
challenges for mobile connectivity, including hard to
reach locations that drive up the cost of tower
construction, exposure to the harsh maritime environment
that constantly degrades towers, increasing maintenance
costs, and reducing reliability, and populations that
are dispersed across large geographies.
Lynk's satellites offer a
constellation of cell towers in space that will enable
PNG and Solomon islands’ subscribers to stay connected
across their nations’ vast terrain simply using their
standard unmodified mobile phones. PNG has a land mass
spanning more than 460,000 kilometers and a population
of nine million residents of which more than 80% are
considered rural and have limited or no mobile phone
connectivity with the current terrestrial cell tower
infrastructure. The Solomon Islands are spread over 1.6
million kilometers and is the 22nd largest maritime
exclusive economic zone in the world. Over 75% of
residents of the Solomon Islands live outside urban
areas, with 60% living in localities with fewer than 200
people.
"Mobile phone connectivity across
land and sea continues to be a major priority for Papua
New Guinea and our neighbor the Solomon Islands," says
Amos Tepi, Acting CEO, Telikom PNG. "As our government
continues to re-evaluate the infrastructure needed to
keep our people, including our fishermen, safe and
connected. The option to bypass mobile base stations is
increasingly relevant to our communities especially in
far flung locations. Lynk's mobile phone connectivity –
through mobile base stations-in-space via a network of
satellites – is ideally suited to meet current and
future demands of Papua New Guinea," he continues.
With these agreements, Lynk
eliminates much of the need to invest in land-based
infrastructure and mobile towers for mobile connectivity
throughout island nations. Lynk's
satellite-direct-to-standard-phone service solves the 0G
connectivity problem for residents of the islands of all
these nations, as well as the fishing villages across
vast regions. Lynk also provides an ‘everyone everywhere
emergency’ (EEE) alert service, which notifies
populations ahead of natural disasters, while offering
instant backup after disasters hit.
"Lynk's global commercial service
is poised to launch later this year. We continue to add
carriers as launch partners and anticipate more in the
coming months," notes Charles Miller, Lynk CEO. "0G,
that is lack of any coverage, compromises people’s
safety. The recent Tonga disaster shows just how
important connectivity is for people’s health and safety
during a disaster. It is not just volcanoes and tsunamis
that we need to worry about … it is hurricanes,
earthquakes, fires, tornadoes and blizzards, too. Today,
Lynk is solving the 0G problem in seven island nations.
Tomorrow, we will provide the ultimate safety net that
ensures everyone, everywhere in the world can access
mobile connectivity, no matter what happens."
Lynk’s most recent test satellite
(its fifth prototype cell-tower-in-space) has completed
all its major technical milestones. It has connected
thousands of unique devices across five different
countries, (Bahamas, Canada, New Zealand, the United
Kingdom and the United States), enabling direct two-way
connectivity between devices and Lynk’s satellites.
SAVE THE DATE -
Australasia Satellite Forum 2022
14 & 15 June 2022
|