Outernet Licenses Granted for the Nordic Region
Rivada Expands Market Access to Finland, Sweden and Denmark
Market access for the Rivada Space Networks' Outernet constellation is expanding across the Nordic region. With access now including Finland, Sweden and Denmark, the total number of countries with market access climbs to 20. Success in obtaining the national rights to establish and operate a new satellite communications network in low earth orbit is important for the Nordic region particularly in the light of increasing attacks on shared critical infrastructure.
"We are now on an exciting path to ensure that the Outernet is available for the Nordic region, Europe and globally."
Declan Ganley, Rivada Space Networks
On Monday, an undersea cable that links Finland to Germany, the only direct connection of its kind, was severed. In a separate incident, a 218 km (≈135 mile) link between Lithuania and Sweden's Gotland Island also lost service on Sunday. These latest incidents yet again emphasize the vulnerability of common critical infrastructure and the need to back up and protect the global telecommunications infrastructure.
With the continuing threat of sabotage of subsea communications cables, Rivada's Outernet is designed to provide a new and unique type of terrestrial-free connectivity and as such a future-proof solution for enterprise and government communications. As the first unified global communications network, Rivada's 600 low Earth orbit satellite constellation moves data across a high capacity, ultra-secure and laser-linked satellite network in space, which never touches the ground, ensuring high security and total protection from terrestrial fiber disruption.
In the digital economy, the security and resilience of communications is increasingly important to business users and private users alike. Cable cuts can result in days and even weeks of disruption to business communications as repairs are carried out. Ann Vandenbroucke, Rivada's Chief Regulatory Officer, said "Market access for the Nordic region is a priority in Rivada's roadmap to ensure that the Outernet can mitigate valid concerns of accidents or even infrastructure weaponization with our resilient and robust infrastructure and the advantages of ubiquitous coverage, low latency, and flexibility".
"We are seeing unprecedented demand for Rivada Outernet capacity, especially among data-critical users in enterprises and government," said Declan Ganley, Rivada CEO. "Unlike other satellite constellations, which are partially dependent on fiber interconnected ground stations, Outernet users will access our satellite network directly, ensuring unmatched security and absolute protection from cable cuts. We are now on an exciting path to ensure that the Outernet is available for the Nordic region, Europe and globally to solve essential secure connectivity and networking challenges and open up new business opportunities."