Inmarsat will complete another significant
milestone in the delivery of its Global Xpress (GX) service, with
the scheduled launch of Inmarsat-5 F2 (I-5 F2) from the Baikonur
Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 12.31pm (GMT) on Sunday, 1 February
2015.
Inmarsat is investing US$1.6 billion in the
delivery of Global Xpress, which will create the world’s first
globally available, high-speed mobile broadband service, delivered
through a single network operator.
Inmarsat’s 5th generation satellites, which
form the GX network, have all been built by Boeing Satellite
Systems in California. The launch is being undertaken for Inmarsat
by International Launch Services
(ILS) using a Proton launch vehicle.
Global Xpress will
deliver broadband speeds more than 100 times faster than the
company’s fourth generation (I-4) constellation. It will offer new
opportunities for end-users, in both the public and private
sectors, to significantly enhance their connectivity and to access
bandwidth-hungry applications, even in the remotest and most
inaccessible regions of the world.
The first Global Xpress
satellite, Inmarsat-5 F1, was launched in December 2013 and
entered regional commercial service in July 2014, covering Europe,
the Middle East, Africa and Asia.
Inmarsat-5 F2, scheduled for
launch on 1 February, will provide superfast broadband Global
Xpress or ‘GX’ services covering the Americas and Atlantic
Ocean.
Following the launch of the third Global Xpress
satellite, Inmarsat-5 F3, which is scheduled for early Q2 2015,
Inmarsat is planning to commence global commercial GX services
early in the second half of the year. The new network, which
complements Inmarsat’s existing fleet of L-band communication
satellites, are designed to deliver seamless, superfast mobile broadband
services across the planet.
Rupert Pearce, CEO of Inmarsat,
said, “Global Xpress is a truly transformational technology and,
as we complete its global roll-out, 2015 promises to be one of the
most significant chapters in our company’s history. Through Global Xpress, the world can move forward from the
‘Internet of Everything’ to the ‘Internet of Everywhere’, in which
high-speed, reliable and secure connectivity is available anywhere and at any time – even in the most inaccessible regions – for
customers on the move or to fixed locations. We believe that our
new global network will power innovation, support economic development and help transform social services, from education to
healthcare, in regions not adequately served – or not served at
all – by terrestrial networks.”
Each of the three
satellites in the initial GX fleet has 89 beams and six steerable
high-power spot beams for multi-regional coverage. The GX
satellite weighs 6,100kg at launch with a wing-span wider than a
Boeing 737. All three have a design life of 15 years.
The
I-5 F2 will be launched by ILS on-board a Proton Breeze M rocket.
Kazakhstan,
Boeing,
Inmarsat,
Satellite,
Global XPress
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