New Inmarsat satellite ‘could one day power flying taxis’

The British firm is preparing to launch a high-powered communications satellite into orbit.
(Inmarsat/Airbus Defence and Space/PA)
Martyn Landi22 December 2021

British firm Inmarsat is expected to launch what it says is the “most sophisticated commercial communication satellite ever built”.

The satellite firm’s I-6 F1 is due to lift off from Japan on Wednesday afternoon on board a launch vehicle built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.

The satellite is the largest commercial comms satellite ever launched, Inmarsat said.

It is the firm’s first hybrid satellite, carrying two different communication network payloads, which will boost infrastructure networks such as maritime and aviation safety, remote agriculture and emergency response, and also in-flight WiFi on planes and secure communications for heads of state.

The beauty is that these satellites have got a minimum lifespan of around 15 years so it will go the 2040s and beyond

Rajeev Suri

Inmarsat chief executive Rajeev Suri told the PA news agency that the satellite had been designed to stay in orbit for at least 15 years, and could eventually be used to support not just present-day technology but also future innovations such as the networks needed to deploy flying taxis.

“What it will offer our customers is a lot more capacity compared to our previous generations satellites,” he said.

“And the beauty is that these satellites have got a minimum lifespan of around 15 years so it will go the 2040s and beyond, which means that it will not only support the applications and use cases that we know and see today, but also new ones that we haven’t fully comprehended or even imagined, so it’s very exciting.”

The I-6 F1 is the first of two satellites to be launched, and Mr Suri said the network coverage provided could allow people to make video calls during a flight or stream films from a merchant ship in the middle of the ocean.

This coverage in remote areas could also be used to connect autonomous vehicles or flying taxis and the array of sensors used to drive them in the future, he said.

“It could be that when we have autonomous taxis in the air, they would be supported in urban centres by 5G, but outside of the urban areas, this (the satellite) could be the primary way to connect.”

Mr Suri described Wednesday’s launch as a “multinational effort”, but one that also represented “the best of British technology”.

“The satellites are manufactured in Stevenage and Portsmouth, but in concert with other teams like Airbus – so it was finally assembled in Toulouse,” he said.

“It will be monitored from our operating centre in London and it’s being launched together with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries from Kagoshima in Japan.”

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