Micro-satellites in works to beam broadband all over

LOS ANGELES -- It's been more than a decade since a handful of ambitious entrepreneurs saw their plans to provide global telecommunications service through large clusters of satellites fail, doomed by runaway costs.

Now, a new generation of satellite entrepreneurs is headed back to the launchpad. Backed by billions of dollars from deep-pocketed investors, they plan to blanket the earth in the next few years with perhaps thousands of miniature satellites beaming cheap, ubiquitous broadband service.

Launching one of these smaller satellites can cost a fraction of the price for a larger, school-bus-sized satellite. These new satellites will largely be mass-produced. And consumers now demand high-speed Internet connectivity pretty much everywhere, on airplanes, cruise ships and in the remotest villages in Africa.

Companies such as SpaceX, OneWeb and Boeing have recently proposed networks of satellites in low-Earth orbit to provide high-speed broadband access around the globe.

Even Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg has aspirations to provide Internet to poorly connected areas -- a plan that was derailed in September after a satellite set to beam high-speed service to areas including sub-Saharan Africa was destroyed in the explosion of a SpaceX rocket on a Florida launch pad.

If this latest wave of satellite networks gets off the ground, it could pose a challenge to a $224.6 billion industry currently dominated by telecom and cable companies with their miles of fiber-optic and copper wires.

"That's going to shake up how these operators are controlling different regions, and it's going to allow the consumer a little more of an option," said Taylor Palmer, industry analyst at market research firm IBISWorld.

In mid-December, the Arlington, Va.-based OneWeb said it secured $1.2 billion of funded capital in a round led by Japanese technology giant SoftBank Group Corp., which contributed $1 billion of the total.

The money will fund the construction of a Florida satellite manufacturing plant, which is set to start production in 2018.

SoftBank is just one addition to OneWeb's list of big-name investors, which includes Qualcomm Inc., Airbus Group, the Coca-Cola Co. and Richard Branson's Virgin Group.

"One of the main challenges is raising financing from investors, so this proves they are able to continue doing that and they're still attracting money from these big, established companies," said Bill Ostrove, aerospace and defense analyst at market research firm Forecast International. "That's going to be really vital."

Satellite-provided broadband service is still tiny. It generated revenue of $1.9 billion in 2015, according to a June report from the Tauri Group that was commissioned by the Satellite Industry Association trade group. That compares with $97.8 billion for satellite television.

But interest in satellite broadband is growing as consumers expect high-speed service in places that aren't always well-served by fiber or cable.

Last month, Southwest Airlines said it planned to equip its entire fleet of more than 700 planes with Wi-Fi.

"There's a competitive advantage for those that have that service available," said Tom Stroup, president of the Satellite Industry Association. "Broadband has essentially become an expected fact of life."

Analysts say satellite constellations could have the biggest effect in remote areas.

In 2014, almost half of the world's population lived in rural regions, which are largely unconnected to the Internet, according to a report from ITU, a special agency of the United Nations that handles information and communication technologies.

"Internet access is fundamental for understanding of culture, cultural differences, civic understanding and participation," said Greg Wyler, founder and executive chairman of OneWeb. "It helps make the unconnected economically relevant to the developed world. When they're economically relevant, we pay a lot more attention to them."

The company plans to launch the first 10 satellites into low-Earth orbit in early 2018 to test their capabilities. More launches will follow, with its broadband access beginning as early as 2019.

OneWeb says it will connect every unconnected school to the Internet by 2022. Eventually, OneWeb plans a 700-satellite constellation.

OneWeb's satellite manufacturing facility in Exploration Park, Fla., is key to those plans. The company will mass-produce its micro-satellites with automated assembly capabilities similar to those used in aircraft production facilities, eventually making three a day.

OneWeb has said the satellites will weigh about 330 pounds.

SpaceX, based outside Los Angeles, plans to eventually launch more than 4,000 satellites for its network. Each satellite would be about 13 feet long and 6 feet wide, with 19-foot-long solar arrays.

In 2015, the company received a $1 billion infusion from Google Inc. and Fidelity Investments and opened an office in Redmond, Wash., near Seattle, to focus on developing the small satellites. SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk has said the whole constellation could cost $10 billion to $15 billion.

After launching an initial 800 satellites, SpaceX said, the company could provide broadband coverage to the U.S., Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. By its final deployment, the company said, it "will pass over virtually all parts of the Earth's surface."

Boeing's proposed 2,900-satellite constellation is intended to provide broadband access to both commercial and government users worldwide. The aerospace giant said it planned to launch more than 1,300 satellites within six years of the license approval.

The satellite swarms are made possible by advances in miniaturized parts and microprocessors. They could also help shrink the price gap between satellite and terrestrial broadband access, Palmer said.

In the past, satellite broadband was hampered by slower data transfer based on the long distance from Earth -- a problem the companies hope to solve by putting their satellites in low-Earth orbit. They will also launch extra satellites to ensure coverage if a few break down.

"If they're really able to optimize the production ... and get it out at a cost-per-unit measurement that makes sense for a household ... then it really could expand satellite broadband into a major competitor for some of these terrestrial companies," Palmer said.

Business on 01/12/2017

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