Telecommunications are
becoming increasingly crucial to our society,
economy and security. ESA is supporting the
European satellite communication industry’s
efforts to identify how to meet future worldwide
demands for more secure and resilient digital
systems.
Earlier this month ESA
initiated two parallel studies to envisage the
shape of the future secure telecommunications
market and to clarify which solutions and
disruptive technologies will be needed.
The results will inform
work undertaken between 2021 and 2023 as part of
its programme of Advanced Research in
Telecommunications Systems. This will enable ESA
to help European and Canadian industry to
prosper in the highly competitive global market
for secure satellite communications.
The telecommunications
satellite market is changing. A wave of
innovation has created a wide range of new
solutions and services, such as very high
capacity geostationary satellites, flexible
spacecraft for dynamic resources allocation,
constellations of nanosatellites providing
internet-of-things services and large
constellations of broadband satellites operating
in low Earth orbit.
These innovations could
equip Europe or other regions with a satellite
infrastructure able to provide services for
safety critical applications.
Air-traffic management,
maritime management and civil protection, as
well as private markets such as industrial
processes monitoring and financial markets all
need ubiquitous, secure, autonomous, accessible
and resilient communication. Adding a
tailor-made, large-scale next-generation
satellite communications component to existing
global digital infrastructure would make this a
reality in Europe and worldwide.
Two consortia – one led by
satellite manufacturer Airbus and one led by
satellite operator Eutelsat – have won contracts
to clarify how to achieve this technically and
programmatically in the most effective,
cost-efficient and timely way.
They will examine such
considerations as: what is the optimal
combination of satellite configurations? Should
the next generation of satellite infrastructure
rely heavily on large high-throughput
geostationary satellites and what role could be
played by constellations of much smaller
satellites in low Earth orbit? Is there a case
for a combined use of the two within an
integrated, evolutionary system? What are the
key underlying technologies to enable the new
infrastructure, both for space and ground
components? What timescales are involved in
their deployment? And what is the right balance
of public and private contributions?
A future secure
telecommunications constellation could include
multiple orbits
The collaborations between
ESA and Airbus, on the one hand, and Eutelsat on
the other, shall help to quickly identify ways
to make the next-generation satellite
communication infrastructure available as soon
as possible, in line with other projects in
other parts of the world.
Elodie Viau, Director of
Telecommunications and Integrated Applications
at ESA, said: “These two parallel studies will
detail the visions of the next-generation,
end-to-end satellite communication systems. The
studies will help define how best to prepare
industry in Europe and Canada for future world
competitiveness in the secure satellite market.
“The results may also help
support any European initiative to ensure its
satellite communication system remains one of
the most advanced in the world. We look forward
to working with all the relevant European bodies
to realise this vision.”