Iridium’s edge in the crowded low Earth orbit

Home Programs Iridium’s edge in the crowded low Earth orbit

CEO, Matt Desch says, “We are offering something quite unique because of our spectrum, our of our history.”

For the past couple of years, the satellite industry has been a hotbed of activity, with newcomers entering to fill emerging niches, while established ones adapt and forge their transition. One such story is Iridium’s, the first commercial operator of low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites that introduced direct-to-device (D2D) connectivity long before it became a buzzword. 

The satellite industry wasn’t always this buzzy

In the 90s when Iridium entered, satellite was a “sleepy” little industry that not many cared to follow, remembered Matt Desch, CEO of Iridium.

Speaking on Pulse, Desch said, back then, “there were very defined interests, devices were quite expensive…And there was a lot of failures in the industry because it was so expensive, so much capital to develop before you could even be in business.” 

But as connectivity has gone from a nice-to-have to must-have, the realities of the industry too have changed.

“Cell phones still, on the terrestrial basis, only cover 10 to 14% of the Earth’s surface and not in the air,” Desch noted. And this seemingly small fact has started a land grab of spectrums and satellites, that big operators like Starlink and Amazon Leo to smaller players like AST SpaceMobile and Skylo are scrambling for. 

Eye on IoT

Iridium does not operate in the same space as these satellite operators. “We are offering something quite unique because of our spectrum, our of our history,” Desch said.

Today Iridium identifies as an IoT company, with over 500 partners that have embedded its service across maritime, aviation, agriculture, government, energy, and transportation applications. Their satellite service powers 2 million IoT devices that are used for management, monitoring and tracking of assets in remote environments. The company has recently started expanding to Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs).

“Iridium is quite profitable today. We’re successful, and we continue to grow,” he said.

The company is set to launch Iridium Direct NTN later this year, a service that will connect IoT devices and smartphones directly to its satellite network. The service was announced at CES in January
— after a prior attempt to launch failed in 2023 — with alpha and beta testing currently underway with mobile network operators (MNOs). The standards-based IoT system is based on Iridium’s LEO constellation and L-band spectrum.  

One of Iridium’s biggest growth areas is positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT). The company offers Satellite Time, and Location (STL) data service, a PNT alternative satellite-based time synchronization service, delivered using Iridium’s broadcast paging channels. 

“That channel was something that we realized 10 to 15 years ago could be used to deliver timing correction signals and we could encrypt that information,” he said. “We could deliver it a thousand times more powerfully than GPS…[and] be very difficult to jam or spoof. And even could just be a timing reference signal inside buildings where it’s difficult to get a GPS timing source.”

The service was originally built by Boeing Phantom Works, a research and prototyping division of Boeing Defense, Space & Security, and was later spun off, before Iridium bought it back recently to launch its STL service. 

The service is commercially available across North America, Europe, and Asia Pacific today. 

Desch is optimistic about adoption of satellite-based synchronization services. “It’s being implemented across the world right now, in maritime applications…we’re seeing [it in] drones…and other kinds of autonomous vehicles. We’re seeing it put into cell towers to protect critical infrastructure. It’s going into the New York Stock Exchange, the NASDAQ…We’re seeing critical infrastructure of all types be protected via this kind of technology.” 

Talking about the growing number of LEO satellites in space today, Desch said, “Obviously, people are concerned about things running into each other — we’re worried about that as well — but frankly, we’re all doing a good job of keeping ourselves apart from each other,” he said.

However, he added that a bigger constellation is justified when operators can generate massive amounts of revenue and remain successful in the long run.

On D2D

The industry today still faces the same problem with D2D that Iridium did when it introduced its D2D service back in the 90s, said Desch. Adoption is nowhere near as operators had hoped. 

“I think mainstream is still a couple years away,” said Desch about D2D entering mainstream.

“You could say what you can get on your iPhone is mainstream today. I don’t think many people have necessarily tried it or use it often. Certainly given that it’s free and its occasional capability, it hasn’t moved the needle necessarily in terms of device sales or things like that. So I I don’t think it’s really achieved the potential uh that justifies valuations and investment and everything today,” he said. 

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