- State-run Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited(BSNL) is planning to extend satellite phone services for all citizens in two years that can work at any corner of the country and remain immune to the breakdown of mobile services during natural calamities.
- Call rates on satellite phones are expected the range to be around Rs 30-35 per minute in the first phase.
New Delhi: "We have applied to International Maritime Organisation. It will take some time to complete the process. In 18-24 months, we will be in a position to open satellite phones service for citizens in a phased manner," BSNL Chairman and Managing Director Anupam Shrivastava told PTI.
Satellite phones will able to work in any part of the country, even inside flights and ships, as they depend on signals directly from satellite's located about 35,700 km above the earth.Traditional mobile network cover around 25-30 km around towers and can transmit signals to phones placed equals to or below the height of the tower.
BSNL has started satellite phone service using INMARSAT service which will be initially offered to government agencies and later extended to citizens in a phased manner. The service will cover areas where no network are present and be provide by INMARSAT
which has 14 satellites.
Agencies handling the disaster, Railways, Border Security Force, state police and other government agencies will be given the phones in the first phase.
"The number of satellite phone connections in India is very little but once we open it for citizens, the whole dynamics in the market will change. The volumes will bring down the cost of service. We are charging only Re 1 over the cost that satellite firm will bill to us," Shrivastava said.
Call rates on satellite phones are expected to be in the range of Rs 30-35 in the first phase when there are only about 4,600 connections in the country.
"Satellite phones also cost Rs. 40,000 and more. All the satellite phones are imported at present. Once we open it for citizens, the volumes will drive down the cost of calls as well as the handset. Even, a huge volume can attract satellite phone manufacturers to set-up their unit in India. We expect it to create a new ecosystem of satellite services in the country," Shrivastava said.
Satellite phones in India are presently provided by Tata Communications, which inherited the license from Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited (now Tata Communications Ltd). The services of TCL will be phased out by June 30, 2017, and all the connections will be transferred to BSNL.
There have been security concerns on the use of satellite phones in India.
Telecom regulator Trai has said there is a possibility that communication through such phones can be monitored by foreign agencies as their gateways are located outside India, it added.
Defence forces did not opt for satellite phones from the foreign operators because of security and espionage concerns. Shrivastava said that now satellite phone gateway has been set-up in India with a legal interception and monitoring system (LIMS).
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