Hughes and OneWeb working to fill military’s Arctic communication gap
- by Defense News
- May 06, 2021
- 0 Comments
- 0 Likes Flag 0 Of 5
 May 6, 2021
The OneWeb gateway in Svalbard, Norway, capable of 10,000 hand-offs per second, is one of the gateways developed by Hughes that will orchestrate handover and tracking of gigabits of data for NORTHCOM. (OneWeb/Kongsberg Satellite Service)
WASHINGTON â The U.S. Air Force is teaming up with Hughes Network Systems and OneWeb to test how the latterâs new commercial broadband satellites could fill the militaryâs Arctic communications gap, the two companies announced May 5.
The businesses will work with the Air Force Research Lab to connect Arctic military bases to each other and the joint force via OneWebâs growing low-Earth orbit satellite constellation. Hughes will serve as the prime contractor, leading adaptation, integration, testing and management for the demonstration. Intellian will provide user terminals that can connect to the OneWeb network.
âThis opportunity reinforces the relationship between Hughes and the U.S. Air Force to ensure resilient, flexible SATCOM networks for tactical, multi-domain operations,â said Rick Lober, vice president and general manager of the Defense and Intelligence Systems Division at Hughes. âWe look forward to partnering with OneWeb to bring LEO innovation into the military SATCOM enterprise, especially in the strategic Arctic region where connectivity has been limited â until now.â
Hughes declined to reveal the value of the contract.
Like SpaceXâs Starlink, OneWeb was initially touted as a commercial broadband alternative, providing internet access with a proliferated constellation of hundreds of satellites in low-Earth orbit. While both are continuing to build out their constellations, theyâve found a new customer: the Pentagon. The Department of Defense wants to use the new low-latency networks to connect its distributed sensors to its shooters, and has conducted a number of experiments to see if thatâs feasible. In December 2019, the Air Force was able to pass data from an AC-130 gunship using Starlink, and the U.S. Army used commercial LEO constellations to pass targeting data developed from satellite imagery to a demonstration battlefield at Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona, during its Project Convergence 2020 exercise.
Itâs also sparked interest from U.S. Northern Command, where leaders say the new LEO constellations could close the Arctic communications gap. The U.S. Space Forceâs primary satellite communications system, Wideband Global SATCOM, does not provide polar coverage. And while the Space Force does operate two Enhanced Polar System satellites for Arctic coverage, those satellites serve as compliments to the Advanced Extremely High Frequency constellation for nuclear-survivable high-priority military communications. It is not intended to serve as the Arctic alternative Wideband Global SATCOM. Traditional commercial satellitesâ availability is also limited.
âVery simple things become hard when youâre in the Arctic, not the least of which is communication. When you are above about 65 degrees north, satellite communication starts to diminish, and above about 70 degrees north it becomes extremely limited except for some of our more exquisite capability â submarines, for example,â U.S. Northern Command spokesman Maj. Mark Lazane told C4ISRNET last year.
âConnection capabilities [in the Arctic] are limited and lack resiliency. Weâre challenged in areas from basic point-to-point connections to communication with our distributed sensors,â Lazane said. âHaving a reliable broadband communications capability for Arctic operations is the top unfunded priority of USNORTHCOM. With the increase of great power competition in the Arctic, there is a need for additional communications capability and capacity.â
In 2020, USNORTHCOM asked Congress for $130 million to explore using OneWebâs and SpaceXâs new constellations for Arctic communications, listing that endeavor as the commandâs No. 1 unfunded priority.
Now through AFRL, the military will begin experimenting with OneWebâs constellation in the Arctic. The company said it has launched 182 satellites to date, with plans to continue growing the constellation and deliver coverage to the Arctic region by the end of 2021.
âThe OneWeb constellation has been designed to enable low-latency broadband access across the globe, allowing connectivity in previously unreached areas â a capability that is ideal for tactical, multi-domain operations in the Polar region and beyond,â said Dylan Browne, head of government services with OneWeb. âWorking together with Hughes, we will bridge the gap in connectivity for NORTHCOM with an interoperable and secure solution.â
About
Please first to comment
Related Post
Stay Connected
Tweets by elonmuskTo get the latest tweets please make sure you are logged in on X on this browser.
Energy





