OneWeb demonstrates
low-Earth-orbit offering and global connectivity
solution to humanitarian community in Geneva
17 August 2023
OneWeb announced that
representatives of international humanitarian
organisations took part in a successful
demonstration of low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite
capabilities last month at the headquarters of the
International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva,
Switzerland.
The meeting saw attendance from
local organisations and virtual attendance from a
number of United Nations’ humanitarian
organisations. The annual event allows IT and
Telecoms managers from across the major
non-governmental organizations to experience new
technology solutions in the market, relevant to
their efforts and to enable discussions with key
providers on their needs.
The demonstration was a
significant milestone for OneWeb in the region since
expanding connectivity services across Southern
Europe. The team showcased the network’s capability
to deliver high-speed, low latency communications
through two different user terminals. First was with
the recently launched Kymeta Hawk u8 user terminal
which is suited for fixed applications and mountable
on moveable vehicles and vessels. Secondly, the team
showcased the new human-portable flat panel INSTER,
which slides into a backpack for increased
portability for ‘any situational’ comms on the pause
(COTP) and will be available in the second half of
this year. Movability is a vital aspect of natural
disaster and human crisis missions where no cellular
or terrestrial-based networks are available and
these user terminals in OneWeb’s product line are
well placed to support critical comms in emergency
response situations.
For customers, OneWeb offers a
secure and agile low-earth-orbit communications
plan, providing end users with primary, alternate,
contingency and emergency (PACE) connectivity should
any specific network become disrupted or unavailable
for any reason.
OneWeb, successfully streamed
4K video feeds, ran Teams and GoogleEarth
applications at up to 150Mbps download speeds; up to
29Mbps upload speeds; and latency levels as low as
70ms.
OneWeb Director of Government,
Charlie Clark, who conducted the demo, said: “In
uncertain environments like natural disaster areas
where humanitarian teams are operating in highly
stressful and ever-chasing circumstances,
connectivity on the move, as well as on the pause,
is important.
“Teams could be operating where
the ground has been destroyed or is unstable, so
wheels are not an option. In this situation
terminals need to be carried in and that’s where the
OneWeb family of ground terminals offers flexibility
for these differing needs - a flat panel like the
Kymeta works well on a vehicle but when that isn’t
viable the INSTER, which is lightweight, is an ideal
human-portable solution.
“OneWeb is ideally placed to
help compress decision cycles, provide essential
situational analysis and get resilient, high
bandwidth, low latency connectivity to agency teams
communicating together on the ground. It was great
to be able to demonstrate these attributes to the
Red Cross and Humanitarian Community in Geneva as it
looks to engage with space-led technologies and
innovations for faster operational capabilities.”
According to Clark, “The
feedback we received from the event was extremely
successful. The OneWeb offering works on many levels
for organisations like Red Cross. We can operate
multiple service plans on one device so the network
slice can adapt and work across various teams - be
it operational traffic for critical comms or welfare
links for everyday internet use. This really helps
with flexibility of budget splits and makes the
offering more accessible.”
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