Editor's Choice


Satellite IoT through non-terrestrial networks

31 Jul 2025 Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT

In 2024, mobile network coverage of 3G or higher was available to 96% of the global population, with gaps in the least developed and landlocked developing countries. Even with high population coverage, there are still many geographic cellular coverage gaps since networks are concentrated in urban and suburban centres. Many rural and remote locations, even in developed nations, have spotty or limited cellular or LPWAN service.

Enter non-terrestrial networks, or NTNs. These networks fill cellular coverage gaps in remote areas by extending terrestrial networks. They are not subject to disruptions from natural disasters or sabotage, so they can serve an important role in emergency communications. NTNs are a great fit for outdoor use cases, such as tracking assets that are moving across geographies or networks such as logistics or livestock tracking, as well as connecting to fixed assets in remote areas like electrical infrastructure or oil and gas pipelines.

Satellites present the largest opportunity to extend cellular coverage, but there are many types of satellite communication technologies. Commercial network operators have chosen different technical approaches, so how can your organisation know which partnerships to pursue?

Technological approaches to satellite IoT

Operators with LEO and GEO satellite networks are taking one of two technological approaches, using either proprietary technology or direct-to-cell technology.

Proprietary technology includes infrastructure that is not commercially available to other operators. Whether that infrastructure is specialised satellites that connect directly to proprietary devices, terrestrial workstations, telematics devices, or a software platform, proprietary solutions offer an end-to-end experience. One example of a proprietary operator is ORBCOMM, which owns more than 30 LEO satellites and corresponding ground infrastructure.

NB-IoT over NTN: The 3GPP organisation develops specifications for all cellular technologies, including narrowband IoT (NB-IoT). NB-IoT has had global adoption and the last few 3GPP updates extended the standard to non-terrestrial networks. 3GPP Rel-19 provides a major step forward in the integration of NTNs with 5G by its inclusion of a complete gNodeB (gNB) on a satellite, which minimises the need for a ground network. Commercial operator Skylo uses legacy Viasat GEO satellites and existing devices for its NB-IoT NTN.

NTN LoRaWAN combines a mature LoRa ecosystem with GEO and LEO satellites, which act as LoRaWAN gateways in the sky. The use cases are sensor oriented, such as gathering real-time temperature and moisture data, monitoring electrical grid infrastructure for vibrations or water meters readings. At least three companies have commercialised these LoRaWAN NTNs, including EchoStar Mobile with GEO satellites, Lacuna space and Plan-S with LEO constellations.

Direct-to-cell technology uses LEO satellite systems that can communicate directly with commercially available cellular devices, bypassing cell towers on land. Cellular is then possible in rural, remote, or disaster areas. Depending on the operator, voice, text, and data communications are enabled. Starlink is one example, launching direct-to-cell services with over 320 specialised satellites, partnering with mobile carriers to use their existing licensed spectrum.

The future of IoT with non-terrestrial networks

Regardless of the IoT use case, coverage is always an issue. Companies must carefully plan for fallback depending on where in the world the application operates. Now there is the potential to have a fallback technology that will likely be available everywhere. This gives the benefits and scale of standard technologies with the ability to connect over satellite anywhere in the world.

The Semtech HL7810 and HL7812 did not need a hardware change to meet Skylo certification requirements; instead, a firmware update supplied all necessary technical changes. The modules that are already being used for LTE coverage now offer this additional capability with no additional hardware costs.

With Semtech 3rd generation LoRa chips the low power benefit of LoRaWAN now becomes available for direct to satellite connectivity, with the opportunity to keep full interoperability with terrestrial LoRaWAN networks.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

EMC limits and levels
Altron Arrow Editor's Choice Circuit & System Protection
As soon as electronics and electrical systems started interfering with each other, the world had to come to some consensus. Considering physics is universal and does not care about what country electrical/electronic products are used in, it should be the same everywhere, right? It is nearly there, but not quite.

Read more...
Rapid IoT prototyping simplified
Future Electronics Test & Measurement
The STEVAL-MKBOXPRO from STMicroelectronics is a compact, ready-to-use wireless development kit designed to accelerate the creation of intelligent IoT and wearable applications.

Read more...
Sigfox SA powers smart connectivity
Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
Sigfox South Africa is carving out a unique role, delivering low-power, wide-area network connectivity designed specifically for Internet of Things applications.

Read more...
Seeing through the noise
RF Design Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
How Adaptive Long Coherent Integration (ALCI) delivers superior measurement and positioning performance where conventional receivers fall short.

Read more...
Case Study: Turning data into insight
Hamamatsu Photonics UK Editor's Choice Opto-Electronics
Hamamatsu Photonics’ InGaAs PIN photodiode detector has proven consistent, reliable, and robust for more than a decade, helping Axetris to deliver stable, repeatable measurements.

Read more...
Photonics solutions for manufacturing excellence
Hamamatsu Photonics UK Editor's Choice
Hamamatsu Photonics is a global leader in photonics technology, offering cutting-edge light-based solutions that transform not only industrial manufacturing, but also diverse sectors such as healthcare, scientific research, and environmental monitoring.

Read more...
Cortex-M33 performance for cost-sensitive designs
Future Electronics DSP, Micros & Memory
The STM32C5 series from STMicroelectronics introduces a new generation of entry-level microcontrollers engineered to deliver enhanced processing capability, modern security, and cost-effective scalability for connected embedded applications.

Read more...
Designing with PCIe
Spectrum Concepts Editor's Choice Interconnection
PCI Express has become the backbone of modern high-performance systems with each new generation promising higher bandwidth, but that performance comes with a cost.

Read more...
Understanding two key tools for cleaner serial data
Altron Arrow Editor's Choice Analogue, Mixed Signal, LSI
Understanding how pre-emphasis and equalisation works, and when to use one over the other, is critical when designing reliable high-speed systems.

Read more...
Connected without limits: An engineering perspective on Altron Arrow’s wireless ecosystem
Altron Arrow Editor's Choice Design Automation
Wireless connectivity is no longer a supporting technology, but rather, a core design consideration that underpins modern electronic systems across industries.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved