\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure><\/strong>As much as half of India’s population is still not on the internet despite being the fastest growing mobile market in the world. One part of India has been abuzz with the launch of 5G services, while the other is oblivious to the internet revolution.

The pandemic has worsened the digital divide<\/a> in India.

This is where
satellite communication<\/a> services could fit and bridge the digital divide<\/a> that exists in India and give a way to the government’s dream of a digitally connected India.

The government this week announced
several reforms for satcom services<\/a> to streamline various procedures and clearances apart from easing norms for obtaining the Global Mobile Personal Communication by Satellite (GMPCS) licence which is required to operate as a satcom<\/a> player in India. It has set a goal to connect 1.2 billion Indians to the internet by 2025-26 where the role of satellite communications<\/a> and space segment will be critical.

India’s huge market size and potential has attracted many
satcom<\/a> players to its shores. Sunil Mittal backed OneWeb<\/a>, Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jio Space Tech<\/a> have ambitious plans to explore the untapped potential of the Indian satcom market.

Satcom is being touted as the next big technological revolution<\/a>. However, a major contention over the allocation of satcom spectrum still remains. The satellite industry<\/a> has urged the government to administratively allocate spectrum in line with global practices. Another view is of the auction process to allocate spectrum, as per the current rules of spectrum allocation for telecom services.

Bharti Enterprises Chairman
Sunil Bharti Mittal said that spectrum for satellite communications cannot be auctioned off <\/a>on the lines of its recent sale for 5G services saying satcom airwaves will be used in limited areas and will not be a cash-rich source for generating billions of dollars of revenue. In contrast, Reliance Jio<\/a> and Vodafone Idea<\/a> have favored auctioning satellite spectrum earlier. Telecom regulator TRAI is working on allocation methodology for satcom airwaves.

Read also<\/h4>
<\/a><\/figure>
Centre releases procedural reforms, streamlines frequency allocation<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Satellite communications to play key role in driving India&#39;s tech ambitions, internet reach: MoS IT<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Space technologies offer convergence, can put spectrum to use: Rajaraman<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
OneWeb’s in-orbit constellation reaches 462 satellites with new deployment by ISRO arm NSIL<\/a><\/h5><\/div><\/div><\/div>
Over the years, telecom players have been trying hard to take internet coverage to the nook and corner but the high cost of expansion and setting up towers in far flung areas is not feasible. Satcom could provide last mile connectivity, which will also lower down cost for service providers. But it will be a long road as the dearth of handheld devices and high data costs for satcom services will still be an impediment. Satellite broadband rates in India are at $15-20 per GB which is nearly 30 times that of 4G mobile data at $0.68.

Next year,
OneWeb is expected to launch its services in India mainly in the business to business segment<\/a>.

Satcom
industry<\/a> is at its nascent stage in India but has the potential to revolutionise connectivity along with 4G and 5G services and an increased competition and high demand will bring down the costs for satellite broadband over the years.<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":95164810,"title":"Bharti Airtel Q2 preview: ARPU, subscriber growth a booster, view on tariffs key","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/bharti-airtel-q2-preview-arpu-subscriber-growth-a-booster-view-on-tariffs-key\/95164810","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":95165653,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"Telecom Diary: Will Satcom services bridge the digital divide in India?","synopsis":"The government this week announced several reforms for satcom services to streamline various procedures and clearances apart from easing norms for obtaining the Global Mobile Personal Communication by Satellite (GMPCS) licence which is required to operate as a satcom player in India. It has set a goal to connect 1.2 billion Indians to the internet by 2025-26 where the role of satellite communications and space segment will be critical.","titleseo":"telecomnews\/will-satcom-services-bridge-the-digital-divide-in-india","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[{"author_name":"Mansi Taneja","author_link":"\/author\/479255290\/mansi-taneja","author_image":"https:\/\/etimg.etb2bimg.com\/authorthumb\/479255290.cms?width=100&height=100&hostid=268","author_additional":{"thumbsize":true,"msid":479255290,"author_name":"Mansi Taneja","author_seo_name":"mansi-taneja","designation":"Associate Editor","agency":false}}],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":1601,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":2933000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ETTelecom","artdate":"2022-10-29 19:00:00","lastupd":"2022-10-29 19:03:45","breadcrumbTags":["satellite communications","sunil bharti mittal","reliance jio","jio space tech","satcom","digital divide","satellite communication","OneWeb","Vodafone Idea","Industry"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/will-satcom-services-bridge-the-digital-divide-in-india"}}" data-authors="[" mansi taneja"]" data-category-name="" data-category_id="" data-date="2022-10-29" data-index="article_1">

电信日记:卫星通信服务在印度数字鸿沟的桥梁?

卫星通信服务的政府本周宣布几个改革精简各种程序和许可除了宽松政策规范获取全球移动个人通信卫星(gmpc作)许可证是必需的操作作为一个在印度卫星通信的球员。它设定一个目标由2025 - 26 12亿印度人连接到互联网,卫星通信和空间段的作用将至关重要。

曼西希夫
  • 2022年10月29日更新是07:03点
阅读: 100年行业专业人士
读者的形象读到100年行业专业人士
印度一半的人口还没有在互联网上尽管是世界上增长最快的手机市场。印度的一部分开始热闹起来,推出5 g服务,而另一个是明显的互联网革命。

大流行已经恶化数字鸿沟在印度。

这就是卫星通信服务可能适合和桥梁数字鸿沟存在于印度,给政府的一种数字连接印度的梦想。

政府本周宣布几个卫星通信服务的改革简化各种程序和许可除了宽松政策规范获取全球移动个人通信卫星(gmpc作)许可证要求运作卫星通信在印度的球员。它设定一个目标由2025 - 26 12亿印度人连接到互联网的作用卫星通信和空间段将至关重要。

印度巨大的市场规模和潜力吸引了许多卫星通信玩家。苏尼尔•米塔尔的支持OneWeb,Elon Musk SpaceXJio空间技术有着雄心勃勃的计划探索印度卫星通信的尚未开发的潜力市场。

卫星通信被吹捧为下一个重大的技术革命。然而,一个主要的焦点在卫星通信频谱的分配仍然存在。这颗卫星行业已敦促政府行政分配频谱符合全球实践。拍卖过程分配频谱的另一个观点是,按照当前的频谱分配规则为电信服务。

Bharti企业董事长苏尼尔•巴帝•米塔尔说,光谱卫星通信不能拍卖在其最近的销售5 g服务说卫星通信电波将用于有限的地区,不会是现金充裕的产生数十亿美元的收入来源。相比之下,依赖Jio沃达丰的想法一直青睐拍卖卫星光谱。电信监管机构火车正在分配方法对卫星通信电波。

读也


多年来,电信玩家一直以来努力的采取网络覆盖率nook和角落,但高成本的扩张和建立塔在遥远地区并不可行。卫星通信可以提供最后一英里连接,这对服务提供商也会降低成本。但这将是一个漫长的道路,手持设备和高数据的缺乏对卫星通信服务的成本仍将是一个障碍。印度卫星宽带率在15 - 20美元每GB的近30倍4 g移动数据,报0.68美元。

明年,OneWeb预计将在印度推出服务主要在业务部门的业务

卫星通信行业在印度正处于刚刚起步的阶段,但潜在的革命性连接4 g和5 g服务和增加竞争和卫星宽带的高需求会降低成本。
  • 发布于2022年10月29日07:00点坚持

加入2 m +行业专业人士的社区

订阅我们的通讯最新见解与分析。乐动扑克

下载ETTelec乐动娱乐招聘om应用

  • 得到实时更新
  • 保存您最喜爱的文章
扫描下载应用程序
是第一个发表评论。
现在评论

\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure><\/strong>As much as half of India’s population is still not on the internet despite being the fastest growing mobile market in the world. One part of India has been abuzz with the launch of 5G services, while the other is oblivious to the internet revolution.

The pandemic has worsened the digital divide<\/a> in India.

This is where
satellite communication<\/a> services could fit and bridge the digital divide<\/a> that exists in India and give a way to the government’s dream of a digitally connected India.

The government this week announced
several reforms for satcom services<\/a> to streamline various procedures and clearances apart from easing norms for obtaining the Global Mobile Personal Communication by Satellite (GMPCS) licence which is required to operate as a satcom<\/a> player in India. It has set a goal to connect 1.2 billion Indians to the internet by 2025-26 where the role of satellite communications<\/a> and space segment will be critical.

India’s huge market size and potential has attracted many
satcom<\/a> players to its shores. Sunil Mittal backed OneWeb<\/a>, Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jio Space Tech<\/a> have ambitious plans to explore the untapped potential of the Indian satcom market.

Satcom is being touted as the next big technological revolution<\/a>. However, a major contention over the allocation of satcom spectrum still remains. The satellite industry<\/a> has urged the government to administratively allocate spectrum in line with global practices. Another view is of the auction process to allocate spectrum, as per the current rules of spectrum allocation for telecom services.

Bharti Enterprises Chairman
Sunil Bharti Mittal said that spectrum for satellite communications cannot be auctioned off <\/a>on the lines of its recent sale for 5G services saying satcom airwaves will be used in limited areas and will not be a cash-rich source for generating billions of dollars of revenue. In contrast, Reliance Jio<\/a> and Vodafone Idea<\/a> have favored auctioning satellite spectrum earlier. Telecom regulator TRAI is working on allocation methodology for satcom airwaves.

Read also<\/h4>
<\/a><\/figure>
Centre releases procedural reforms, streamlines frequency allocation<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Satellite communications to play key role in driving India&#39;s tech ambitions, internet reach: MoS IT<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
Space technologies offer convergence, can put spectrum to use: Rajaraman<\/a><\/h5><\/div>
<\/a><\/figure>
OneWeb’s in-orbit constellation reaches 462 satellites with new deployment by ISRO arm NSIL<\/a><\/h5><\/div><\/div><\/div>
Over the years, telecom players have been trying hard to take internet coverage to the nook and corner but the high cost of expansion and setting up towers in far flung areas is not feasible. Satcom could provide last mile connectivity, which will also lower down cost for service providers. But it will be a long road as the dearth of handheld devices and high data costs for satcom services will still be an impediment. Satellite broadband rates in India are at $15-20 per GB which is nearly 30 times that of 4G mobile data at $0.68.

Next year,
OneWeb is expected to launch its services in India mainly in the business to business segment<\/a>.

Satcom
industry<\/a> is at its nascent stage in India but has the potential to revolutionise connectivity along with 4G and 5G services and an increased competition and high demand will bring down the costs for satellite broadband over the years.<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":95164810,"title":"Bharti Airtel Q2 preview: ARPU, subscriber growth a booster, view on tariffs key","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/bharti-airtel-q2-preview-arpu-subscriber-growth-a-booster-view-on-tariffs-key\/95164810","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":95165653,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"Telecom Diary: Will Satcom services bridge the digital divide in India?","synopsis":"The government this week announced several reforms for satcom services to streamline various procedures and clearances apart from easing norms for obtaining the Global Mobile Personal Communication by Satellite (GMPCS) licence which is required to operate as a satcom player in India. It has set a goal to connect 1.2 billion Indians to the internet by 2025-26 where the role of satellite communications and space segment will be critical.","titleseo":"telecomnews\/will-satcom-services-bridge-the-digital-divide-in-india","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[{"author_name":"Mansi Taneja","author_link":"\/author\/479255290\/mansi-taneja","author_image":"https:\/\/etimg.etb2bimg.com\/authorthumb\/479255290.cms?width=100&height=100&hostid=268","author_additional":{"thumbsize":true,"msid":479255290,"author_name":"Mansi Taneja","author_seo_name":"mansi-taneja","designation":"Associate Editor","agency":false}}],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":1601,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":2933000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"ETTelecom","artdate":"2022-10-29 19:00:00","lastupd":"2022-10-29 19:03:45","breadcrumbTags":["satellite communications","sunil bharti mittal","reliance jio","jio space tech","satcom","digital divide","satellite communication","OneWeb","Vodafone Idea","Industry"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/will-satcom-services-bridge-the-digital-divide-in-india"}}" data-news_link="//www.iser-br.com/news/will-satcom-services-bridge-the-digital-divide-in-india/95165653">