High-altitude balloons, unpiloted aircraft seen as answer to emergency communication outages.

AuthorMagnuson, Stew
PositionHomeland Security News

The Federal Communications Commission is writing regulations for aerial platforms that can serve as temporary radio links in regions that have had their terrestrial systems wiped out during a disaster.

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The Deployable Aerial Communications Architecture concept calls for unmanned aerial vehicles, balloons, or payloads that can be placed on piloted aircraft that can send and receive emergency transmissions for up to 96 hours after a catastrophe.

Hurricanes, earthquakes and other disasters have the potential to destroy terrestrial communication towers. The FCC wants to pave the way for companies that want to offer state or federal agencies systems that can serve as temporary communication links.

The vision calls for temporary nodes that can be deployed within 12 to 18 hours, and that are compatible with the same radios currently used by public safety agencies. In May, the FCC issued a Notice of Inquiry to see what industry had to offer.

One company that responded was Space Data, a Chandler, Ariz.-based firm that has deployed high-altitude balloons carrying communication payloads for the gas and oil industry and the U.S. military.

Near space is from about 65,000 to 90,000 feet--far enough up to avoid strong winds and to provide a wide footprint for radio communications.

"Aerial platforms because of their height can offer a lot of coverage," said Jerry Knoblach, chairman and CEO of Space Data.

It demonstrated the capability to the Texas National Guard and U.S. Northern Command last year during the Coalition Warrior Interoperability Demonstration in western Texas.

In that test, subjects with standard radios in Austin were able to communicate with others in E1 Paso, some 600 miles away. Such radios typically have a range of about 10 miles, he said.

Next, the company plans to test the concept in Sacramento, Calif, and Bismarck, N.D., using 4G and Long Term Evolution cellular protocol. Those tests will use the 700 MHz band of spectrum that Congress recently reserved exclusively for public safety communications.

The trick for wide-area coverage will be dealing with the patchwork of frequencies different jurisdictions use, Knoblach noted. If there were a disaster in New Orleans, but Baton Rouge remained untouched, the FCC wouldn't want the...

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