SES Extends Digicel
Partnership to Provide Tonga with Disaster Network
Resiliency via O3b
September 14, 2022
SES and international mobile
network operator Digicel will extend their partnership
to provide the Kingdom of Tonga with long-term disaster
resiliency to minimise bandwidth disruptions. Under the
agreement, Digicel will benefit from SES’s expertise in
offering disaster resiliency via SES’s O3b satellite
constellation to deliver low-latency and high-throughput
connectivity and protect the Tonga population from
future communication interruptions in the event of a
natural disaster.
Launched in 2013, SES’s O3b
satellites are orbiting 8,000 km above the Earth's
surface in medium earth orbit (MEO) and delivers
low-latency connectivity services to any area within 50°
north or south of the equator. For the past decade,
governments and businesses around the Pacific have been
benefitting from the fibre-equivalent performance of the
O3b satellite constellation.
The Kingdom of Tonga has suffered
two major connectivity disruptions in the last four
years, the latest being the result of the Hunga
Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano eruption and subsequent
tsunami in January 2022 which severely damaged undersea
communication links. In the immediate wake of the
disaster, Digicel had leveraged SES’s Geostationary
Earth Orbit (GEO) satellite capacity to restore
temporary connectivity on the islands, allowing Tongan
residents to connect with their families and loved ones.
As the damaged cable connecting the islands of Vava’u
and Tongatapu in Tonga undergo repair, SES’s MEO
satellite service provides Vava’u residents of with
connectivity. Once the cable is fully repaired, it will
become a resiliency service to the main cable that
connects the island to Tongatapu.
The new agreement will see Digicel
use SES’s O3b satellite system, which will deliver
multiple Gbps of capacity for a quick-deploy
connectivity to shield the islands in Tonga from
potential communication disruptions in the future. The
high throughput provided by SES’s O3b satellites will
ensure reliable connectivity for first responders and
the entire population of Tonga.
“The islands in the Pacific are
highly vulnerable to natural disasters, and it is vital
during such crises to have resilient network
connectivity. This is crucial in ensuring relief efforts
can go smoothly and the affected populations can connect
with their families and loved ones living in other parts
of the world,” said John Turnbull, Director of Pacific
Region at SES. “With our continued partnership with
Digicel, SES is glad to deliver high-performance,
reliable connectivity to the residents in Tonga using
our O3b satellites. SES’s second-generation MEO
satellite communication system O3b mPOWER promises
unprecedented flexibility, unparalleled throughput and
scalability, all of which are key to providing
resiliency for vulnerable communities across Asia
Pacific.”
“SES’s multi-orbit satellite fleet
has enabled us to quickly deploy domestic connectivity
to the island of Vava’u at a time when it is crucial to
keep people connected. We are glad to extend our
partnership with SES and continue leveraging their O3b
satellite services to protect the residents of Tonga
from future disasters,” said Mudassar Latif, Chief
Technology Officer at Digicel Group. “We look forward to
future collaborations with SES to bring multi-orbit
satellite communications to other markets in the
Pacific, especially those that are vulnerable to natural
disasters.”
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