The global satellite communications sector, together
with a growing number of international user groups, has launched a campaign to
heighten public and governmental awareness of a trend that threatens current
and future access to satellite telecommunications, broadcasting and other
critical services in the C-band frequency range.
A growing international consensus of
the satellite communications sector is urging nations around the world to recognize
the potential for massive disruption of C-band
satellite communications, radar systems and domestic microwave links if spectrum is
inappropriately allocated to, and frequencies inappropriately assigned for,
terrestrial wireless applications in the C-band.
These organizations include the Global VSAT (very
small aperture terminal) Forum, Europe's Satellite Action Plan-Regulatory
Working Group, the European Satellite Operators Association, the Cable &
Satellite Broadcasting Association of Asia, the Asia Pacific Satellite
Communications Council, the World Teleport Association, the Satellite Users
Interference Reduction Group and the U.S.
Satellite Industry Association. The following represents the unified position
of these industry associations.
Interference in the C-Band
Satellite
communications technology in the C-band in the range of 3.4 gigahertz to 4.2
gigahertz, is used for broadcasting television signals, Internet delivery, data
communication, voice telephony and aviation systems. The satellite systems that
operate in the C-band are suffering
substantial interference, to the point of system failure, in places where
national administrations are allowing Broadband Wireless Access systems to share the same spectrum. The same will happen if 3G and the planned 4G mobile
systems, also referred to as third and fourth generation or
International Mobile Telecommunication (IMT) systems, are allowed to
use C-band frequencies for satellite downlink services as
is being contemplated by some administrations.
To eliminate this harmful
interference, the operators of satellite Earth stations and the users of
satellite communications services have united to communicate their position on
the issue -- and the relevant technical requirements -- to national and
international telecommunications regulators.
Regulators and
radio frequency managers need to allocate spectrum in ways that recognize the
reality of harmful interference and validate the right of incumbent operators
to operate, and their customers to enjoy their services, without disruption by
new users.
C-band
satellite and the Broadband Wireless Access and IMT mobile services are all important services,
and there are ways to find suitable spectrum for all of them to operate.
Several national administrations have designated
portions of the C-band frequency for terrestrial wireless applications such as
Broadband Wireless Access and future mobile services, despite the fact that C-band is already used by satellite services, radar systems and domestic
microwave links.
In such cases, there already have been massive interruptions of
satellite services, and interference with radars and microwave links is likely.
Satellite operations in places including Australia, Bolivia, Fiji, Hong Kong,
Pakistan and Indonesia already have been negatively affected.
Other
national administrations can and should avoid repeating this costly mistake.
Alternative approaches are available.
Importance of the C-band
Use of the C-band
for satellite communications is widespread throughout the Americas and is particularly vital for many developing countries,
particularly in South and Central America, southern Asia, and equatorial Africa
because of its resilience in the presence of heavy rain.
C-band-based
services were vital in facilitating clean up and recovery after the 2004 Asian
tsunami disaster. In addition, the supporting equipment is relatively inexpensive
and the signals easily cover large areas. Such services are well adapted to
provide voice, data services and Internet connectivity in remote areas
underserved by other communications means -- an essential component to bridge the "digital divide" between the developed and
developing world.
They facilitate intercontinental and global
communications, and provide a critical applications in developing countries such as
distance learning, telemedicine, universal access, disaster recovery and
television transmission in many tropical regions. C-band, both standard and
extended, frequencies have been assigned for satellite
downlinks since the industry was inaugurated more than 40 years ago.
Sensitive antennas
Antennas that receive satellite downlink signals in the C-band
are by necessity extremely sensitive devices. They are designed to receive a
low-power signal emitted by small transmitters located in orbit 36,000
kilometers above the equator. In the C-band, satellite services have co-existed
with domestic microwave links and radar for many
years, because the latter systems operate via tightly focused beams from fixed
points, and de-confliction can take place when necessary.
By
contrast, terrestrial wireless applications are by definition ubiquitous and
increasingly mobile, or nomadic.
Mobile and base stations for terrestrial wireless applications emit signals
from many locations in all
directions simultaneously. These signals are powerful enough to saturate the sensitive C-band
satellite receiving systems, potentially causing a total loss of C-band service.
The
sensitivity of C-band satellite receiving systems also means that they may be
disrupted by mobile terrestrial use of frequencies in immediately adjacent
bands. Field tests by the Office of the Telecommunications Authority in Hong
Kong concluded that use of frequencies for terrestrial wireless services in the
extended and standard C-bands was not practical.
Governments that assigned broadband wireless frequencies in the
extended C-band thought the problem could be limited by frequency
segmentation. This has proven to be ineffective in real-world tests.
Large-scale disruptions of services operating in non-overlapping frequency
bands have taken place in several countries, and as a result, governments,
intergovernmental bodies and the
satellite industry have begun to recognize the threat that ill-considered
assignment of standard and extended C-band frequencies to terrestrial
wireless services poses. Some examples of this are:
§
The Hong Kong Telecommunications Authority Working
Group conducted an extensive series of field tests, concluding that Broadband
Wireless Access "equipment within an area of several kilometers around existing
licensed Earth station operating in the same frequencies may cause interference
to the latter ... protection by separation distance is only meaningful for fixed
access but not for mobile access."
§
The Bolivian Superintendencia
de Comunicaciones (SITTEL) approved the use of the 3.4- to 3.8-gigahertz band for telecommunication as the primary
allocation for use of the WiFi industry. But
during the short testing period before the May 2006 roll-out, satellite signals carrying
television channels in Bolivia were severely interrupted -- viewers were missing World Cup games.
SITTEL suspended wireless access system deployments in the 3.7- to
3.8-gigahertz band in all Bolivian territory for 90 days, so that SITTEL could adopt measures to solve
this matter.
§
The Asia-Pacific Telecommunity
in a report from the APT Wireless Forum has warned that "... to avoid interference in non-overlapping frequency
bands ... a minimum separation distance of 2 km needs to be ensured with respect
to all receivers for
[fixed satellite services] FSS, even where [Broadband Wireless Access] and FSS operate on different non-overlapping
frequencies."
§
In Europe, studies have shown that to meet all relevant
interference criteria, for a representative FSS Earth station, the maximum
distances required for Broadband Wireless Access central stations are
between 270 kilometers and 320
kilometers. These distances are referred to as "mitigation
distances" in the report, to indicate that smaller distances may be achievable
through coordination of each Broadband Wireless Access central station. However,
even with coordination it is clear that the necessary separation distances are
at least tens of kilometres and may be hundreds of kilometres. The feasibility of the use of mitigation
techniques by Broadband Wireless Access systems to reduce the
separation distances has not been demonstrated.
§
The Asia-Pacific Broadcasting Union has warned that Broadband Wireless Access "is a promising technology. However, if implemented in
the same frequency bands as the satellite downlinks, it will have an ad verse
impact ... and may make satellite operation in the entire C-band impracticable.
These bands are by far the most important frequency bands for satellite
communication in Asia."