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Skip to main contentEnable accessibility for low visionOpen the accessibility menu Search * * * * * * * Subscribe for Free * Subscribe * News * Connectivity * Cybersecurity * Finance * Government/Military * Technology * Space Economy * Digital Magazine * Digital Edition Archives * Content Collections * End User Perspectives from Air, Land, and Sea * Spotlight on Women’s Leadership in the Satellite Industry * Viasat: The Next Chapter * The Essential Role of Satellite in Combating Climate Change * SES and Intelsat: The Biggest Deal of 2024 * Interactive Features * “10 Hottest” Series * Technology Webcast Series * The Future Space Economy Webcast Series * On Orbit Podcast * Thursday Morning Conversations * Career Center * Events * SATELLITE Conference & Exhibition * CyberSat * Partner Content * The Dawn of a New Era in Satellite IoT – ORBCOMM * Moving Communications Forward – Intelsat * Awards * Advertise with Us * View Media Kit * Download Editorial Calendar * Map Your Marketing Plan * About Us * Meet the Satellite Team * Via Satellite Advisory Board * Contribute to Via Satellite * Contact Us * Privacy Policy * Accessibility Statement * * * * * * * Subscribe for Free LATEST NEWS Government/Military SpaceX Wants to Incorporate Starbase as a New City in Texas Connectivity Iridium Releases Smaller, More Powerful IoT Module and Iridium Certus GMDSS Manufacturing Loft Orbital to Host Hyperspectral Sensors for Australian Startup Esper Technology New ST Engineering iDirect Tech Enables Switching Between GEO and NGSO Satellites Mobility Air Canada to Offer Free Onboard Wi-Fi Finance Fleet Space Raises $100M in Series D Funding Round Manufacturing Honeywell and Airborne Join Supply Chain for MDA Aurora Satellites, Telesat LEO Government/Military Telespazio Wins 2 New Support Services Contracts in Europe Imagery and Sensing New Partnership Allows Maxar to Task Satellogic Satellites Sustainability Astroscale ADRAS-J Mission Gets Within 15 Meters of Space Debris Government/Military ITU CHIEF BOGDAN-MARTIN TASKS THE SATELLITE INDUSTRY WITH EXPANDING INTERNET ACCESS By Shaun Waterman | March 21, 2024 FacebookXLinkedInPrintShare ITU Secretary General Doreen Bogdan-Martin speaking at SATELLITE 2024. Photo: Access Intelligence International Telecommunication Union General Secretary Doreen Bogdan-Martin sought to position her agency as the conscience of the space industry in her keynote address to SATELLITE 2024, urging support for the United Nations’ Sustainable Development agenda and efforts to connect the third of humanity, overwhelmingly poor and rural, who are still offline. The satellite industry, through its innovation and creativity, had made extraordinary technological progress, creating a market worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year, she said. “But as this industry advances at the speed of light, digital inclusion is inching forward at a snail’s pace. Even with thousands of satellites orbiting overhead, 2.6 billion people are still unconnected,” Bogdan-Martin said. This digital divide is “one of the biggest challenges of our time,” she said, “It’s right up there with climate change and environmental sustainability.” To meet that challenge, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) had launched its Partner2Connect Digital Coalition, an effort to corral private sector resources to “connect the hardest to connect” — those in poor and isolated rural communities, especially in developing landlocked or small island nations without a connection to the global fiber optic network. She said the agency was halfway to its goal of raising $100 billion from private sector partners by 2026, including $9 billion committed at the recent Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain. “Of course we can’t reach that goal without you,” she told the audience of executives. “Sometimes, as you know, satellite broadband is the only option to get to those hardest to connect, in the rural and the remote communities.” And the industry had to step up to a role larger than just healing the digital connectivity divide, she said. Satellites are vital to the UN’s broader efforts to ameliorate poverty, “At least 40 percent of the UN Sustainable Development Goals actually rely on Earth observation, on remote sensing, and on global navigation satellite systems,” she said. Other UN initiatives also rely on the space and satellite industry, she said, like the effort to create a global warning system for extreme weather events, becoming more common and more severe as a result of human-caused climate change. The UN’s Early Warning For All initiative aims to create a global system which can deliver geo-located warnings about extreme weather events to communities at risk by 2027. The ITU is responsible for the communication and message dissemination part of that initiative, and is working to “scale warnings through a multiple range of communication channels. And of course, that includes satellite direct broadcast,” she said. The ITU is the world’s oldest international organization, formed in 1865 to facilitate the transmission of telegraph messages across international borders. Now, Bogdan-Martin said, the agency is the global steward of the common resources represented by radio spectrum and orbit allocation. As an example, she cited a 1971 ITU decision that the dark side of the Moon should be kept “as free as possible from transmissions,” so as to avoid any interference with radio astronomy. “Five decades and 77 successful lunar missions later, the ITU-maintained radio regulations continue to safeguard that lunar zone for radio astronomy, for critical space research, and for Humanity’s return to the moon,” she said. The regulations and standards which the agency promulgates are essential to the business of space, she said, because they “ultimately secure your investments by seeking to prevent and eliminate harmful interference between radio systems.” But the long term sustainability of those orbital and spectrum resources is the most important challenge facing the industry, she said, and would require “careful coordination and management for this industry and the entire global economy to be able to function.” Bogdan-Martin noted that the quadrennial World Radiocommunication Conference, which is the rule-making body for the regulations the ITU administers, is devoting more and more of its agenda to space issues. The recently concluded WRC-23 had made important decisions, allocating more spectrum to satellite transmissions, and establishing “a more stable and transparent regulatory framework for space services.” More than 80 percent of the agenda items agreed for the next WRC in 2027, related to space issues, she said. “International cooperation in space communications is more important than ever before, whether it’s for multinational or commercial missions,” she said. Get the latest Via Satellite news! Subscribe Now Scroll for related stories. FacebookXLinkedInPrintShare More On This Topic Satellite Issues Take Center-Stage at WRC-23 Government and Industry Leaders Address How Public-Private Partnerships Can Bridge the Digital Divide Satellite Connectivity Can End the Digital Drought Satellite Issues Take Center-Stage at WRC-23 How WRC-23 Set the Path for a Framework for the Future of Space Communications Regulatory Experts Preview Key Issues for WRC-23 Explore Via Satellite Space Policy Needs to Take Priority for Asia-Pacific Regional Cooperation, Experts Say Honeywell and Airborne Join Supply Chain for MDA Aurora Satellites, Telesat LEO Thursday Morning Conversation With Comtech CEO John Ratigan How Satellites Helped Uncover a Maritime Militia in the South China Sea Tmytek Debuts Antenna-in-Package for 5G Mobile and Satcom Applications Globalstar is Already Working on New Constellation for Apple, CEO Jacobs Tells Investors * © 2024 Access Intelligence – all rights reserved. * Privacy Policy * Cookie Settings * Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Belonging * Accessibility Statement ✓ Thanks for sharing! 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