Countdown to WRC-19: satellite services
This Research Note focusses on satellite agenda items in WRC-19, principally the removal of a restriction on broadcasting-satellite services and improving spectrum access for movable earth stations and non-geostationary satellites.
The USA, Canada and the Asian and European regional groupings support the removal of some of broadcasting-satellite service limitations but African and Arab groups are concerned about interference.
The agenda item relating to Satellite Earth Stations in Motion would allow their use in Ka-bands currently used by the fixed-satellite service allocations. Here the uplink band (27.5 – 29.5 GHz) is controversial because some countries like the US want to use this for 5G while European Administrations want access for ESIMs.
Regarding non-geostationary satellites, the Agenda item concerns three ranges in V-Band used by fixed-satellite services.
Read the full Research Note here.
Research Notes
Japan 1.7 GHz and 3.4 Ghz
News articles
Will South African spectrum policy change under a new administration?
High spectrum prices make mobile services more expensive in Latin America, GSMA claims
Europe leads in 3.5 GHz assignments with patchy progress in other regions
US legislators agree to allow the FCC to make spectrum available again
The passage of RAY BAUM’s Act (H.R. 4986) follows bipartisan bicameral agreement on spectrum-related legislation. Leaders from both US political parties in both chambers of Congress have agreed on wide-ranging legislation on spectrum.