5G from Space:
Airbus and partners to study standards
Space based network
infrastructure will very soon complement the 5G
terrestrial mobile networks that are currently
being deployed. This will lead to satellite
communications becoming an integrated and
indispensable part of the global
telecommunications ecosystem with the potential
to grow existing market segments such as
backhauling and to expand into new areas such as
hybrid networks and the Internet of Things
(IoT). The use of satellites will strongly
contribute to the United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals for a better society and
sustainable growth across industrial sectors.
Space based network
infrastructure will very soon complement the 5G
terrestrial mobile networks that are currently
being deployed. This will lead to satellite
communications becoming an integrated and
indispensable part of the global
telecommunications ecosystem with the potential
to grow existing market segments such as
backhauling and to expand into new areas such as
hybrid networks and the Internet of Things
(IoT). The use of satellites will strongly
contribute to the United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals for a better society and
sustainable growth across industrial sectors.
Airbus Defence and Space
and its partners Fraunhofer IIS, Fraunhofer
FOKUS, Bundeswehr University Munich and Eurescom
GmbH, recently kicked-off a project to study the
delivery of standards based on 5G and beyond 5G
communication services over a space-based
infrastructure.
The study, which is funded
by the Directorate of Telecommunications and
Integrated Applications (TIA) of the European
Space Agency (ESA), will propose a comprehensive
vision of how a 5G and beyond-5G space-based
infrastructure can provide services for
consumers and industries that deliver
performance, reliability, resilience and
security. The consortium will propose a
non-terrestrial network (NTN) infrastructure and
deployment scenarios to deliver advanced
communication services in a timely and
cost-efficient manner. In addition, it will
focus on the preparation of a future satcom
technology roadmap in line with the emerging 6G
concepts in order for an NTN to play an even
greater role in offering global connectivity.
The key objectives of the
study are:
To consolidate requirements
to support a variety of industries and
consumers, in agreement with industry
stakeholders and regulators
To define services that
support these market segments over the mid
(2025) and long term (beyond 2030)
To define overall system
architecture and its components
To define system
convergence and integration with 5G and beyond
5G terrestrial networks, considering relevant
standards such as 3rd Generation Partnership
Project
To elaborate roadmaps in
support of the development, validation, and
implementation of the proposed architecture and
its components, including necessary research
To establish
recommendations for financing mechanisms with
valid procurement and deployment models for the
realisation of the proposed infrastructure.
The study is due for
completion by mid-2022 and will produce a
position paper describing the main findings of
the study. Particular focus will be on proposing
concepts for 5G space-based infrastructure and
recommendations for technology and demonstration
roadmaps as well as associated deployment and
procurement models.