Title: Inmarsat SwiftBroadband: Capability to Support Aeronautical Safety Services
1Inmarsat SwiftBroadbandCapability to Support
Aeronautical Safety Services
- Nikos Fistas, Phil Platt
- ACP Working Group C
- 10th Meeting,
- 13-17 March 2006, Montreal
European Organisation for the Safety of Air
Navigation
2EUROCONTROL Study
- EUROCONTROL launched study at end 2004 with the
aim ... - of helping the aviation community to assess how
Aero-BGAN could improve its communication
infrastructure in fulfilling the aviation
requirements, what would be the resulting concept
of operation in different world regions, what are
the expected associated cost, and how major
institutional and business issues would be
solved. - AeroBGAN now called SwiftBroadband
3Study Consortium
- Contract awarded to a consortium with key
industry partners to carry out the study - QinetiQ - leader
- Inmarsat
- SITA
- Thales Avionics
- EADS Astrium
- Consultation with Stakeholders e.g. through
NexSAT SG, AEEC and ANASTASIA
4Study Overview
- WP1 Technical Characteristics of SwiftBroadband
and its potential to support ATS applications - WP2 Institutional Issues
- WP3 Airborne Architectures
- WP4 Cost and Charges
- WP5 Executive Summary
5WP1 Report Overview
- Overview of BGAN described
- SwiftBroadband features described
- Key points Edge of coverage performance, beam
and satellite transition capabilities, narrow
spot beam activation - Potential for investigation into fall-back
service in event of SwiftBroadband outage - Comparison with NexSAT HLMR, COCR
- Identify shortcomings in SBB
- Possible upgrades described
- Priority, pre-emption and precedence
- Party line using 3G multicast
- Note
- Performance programme with production standard
equipment now completed, SwiftBroadband avionics
data available circa. mid 2007 data not available
during the course of the project BGAN Beta test - Annex with more detail on channel and coding
rates supplied
6WP1 - Packet Switched Service
- Data rates up to 432kbit/s
- High Speed internet access available globally
from small terminals for all mobiles - Based on IPv4
- Performance enhanced by TCP/IP accelerator to
compensate for satellite delay - DSL-class internet access
- Radio Resource Management (RRM) to maintain
minimum data rates as required
7WP1 - Circuit Switched ServicesVoice and Data
- Direct Dial Voice Service
- Optimised 4 kb/s AMBE2 codec
- global access and mobility (870 77)
- Voicemail Services
- Standard UMTS Supplementary Services
- ISDN Bearer Services (same as Swift64)
- 64 kb/s UDI Service to terrestrial ISDN networks
- 3.1kHz Audio Service for PCM voice, fax, and
V-series modem support - Text Messaging
- send to or receive from any SMS-capable device
8WP1 - Terminal Types
SwiftBroadband
BGAN Mode
Existing mode
Existing mode
Aero high gain BGAN
Swift 64
-
regional
High gain (Class 6 UT)
Swift 64
-
regional
266
422
kbit
/s rx
64kbit/s ISDN MPDS
232
492
kbit
/s rx
64kbit/s ISDN MPDS
332
492
kbit
/s
tx
225
492
kbit
/s
tx
Aero H/H
-
global
Aero H/H
-
global
Voice, fax, PM data
Voice, fax, PM data
Voice, fax, PM data
Potential for Safety services
Safety services
Safety services
Aero I BGAN
Aero I
-
regional
Aero I
-
regional
Int. gain (Class 7 UT)
200
344
kbit
/s rx
2.4
kbit
/s fax and data
200
344
kbit
/s rx
2.4
kbit
/s fax and data
192
332
kbit
/s
tx
4.8
kbit
/s X.25
192
332
kbit
/s
tx
4.8
kbit
/s X.25
Voice, fax, PM data
Safety services
Safety services
Potential for Safety services
Aero low gain BGAN
Aero L
-
global
Low gain (Class 4 UT)
Aero L
-
global
tbd kbit
/s rx
1.2
kbit
/s PMD
1.2
kbit
/s PMD
36 - 50 kbit
/s rx
21 - 55 kbit
/s
tx
tbd kbit
/s
tx
Safety services
Safety services
Voice,PM data
Potential for Safety services
- Low gain (Class 4 UT) is a possible future
service. It is being studied as part of Anastasia
project
9WP1 - IOR narrow spot beam coverage of ECAC
The map depicts Inmarsats expectations of
coverage but does not represent a guarantee of
service. The availability of service at the edge
of coverage areas fluctuate depending upon a
variety of conditions.
10WP1 AOR(W) narrow spot beam coverage of ECAC
The map depicts Inmarsats expectations of
coverage but does not represent a guarantee of
service. The availability of service at the edge
of coverage areas fluctuate depending upon a
variety of conditions.
11WP1 Additional features required for Safety
Service In Oceanic Airspace
- Priority and pre-emption (in aircraft, in RAN, in
CN). - Redundancy (in event of major satellite failure)
- Two approaches
- More SBB capable satellites
- If so must probably wait until next generation of
Inmarsat satellites are available. - Use Swift64 or classic as fallback
- Need redundant ground segment
- BGAN already provides this
- Mechanisms to switch quickly to redundant
satellite - Addressing is SIM addressing acceptable (as is
today in SBB) or does it need to use ICAO
address? - Data connection
- Integration of IP bearer within ATS
infrastructure
12WP1 Additional features required for Safety
Service In Enroute Airspace
- As before plus
- Confirmation that Party line is needed
- Multiple SBB directional antennas needed
- Single antenna cannot meet availability criteria
due to antenna key hole effects e.g. during
banking - Will need an omni service to allow operation to
all aircraft in sector - Capacity of SBB needs to be confirmed
13WP1 ATS Requirements
- Requirements are key to assessing technology
capability - ATS communications requirements are complex
- need understood operational concept from which
communication requirements can be drawn - Comparison with COCR
- COCR timescale spans up to at least 2030 in two
Phases - Phase 1 completion is around 2020 with
implementation starting now - Phase 2 is beyond 2020
- SwiftBroadband is relevant to Phase 1 only as
this is nearing the end of the planned satellite
lifetime
14WP1 - ATS Capacity Requirements
- Capacity - air/ground addressed - per service
volume in kbps for Phase 1 - APTairport, ENR Enroute, ORP
Oceanic/Remote/Polar - HD high density, LD low density
15WP1 Latency, Integrity and Availability
16WP1 - Potential use of SwiftBroadband for ATS
- Initial assessment of SBB not clear
- C,I, A figures needs to be confirmed
17WP2 - Institutional Issues
- The business model has changed significantly
- LESOs are no longer in the supply chain
- Inmarsat continues to be a focussed wholesaler
18WP2 Business model
- Inmarsat business model
- Classic aero service is supported on the I-4
satellites and accessed under the existing
arrangements - BGAN is based on a different business model to
classic aero services - Service is operated through Inmarsat owned
facilities - Distribution Partners provide access to the
service to end-users - possibility that ANSPs in the future could have
direct arrangement with Inmarsat
19WP2 - Commercial Issues
- Existing CSPs will continue to offer Classic Aero
services but cannot offer BGAN services without
serving a cooling off period of 1 year. - Inmarsat has negotiated agreements with 10 Land
BGAN DPs. - None yet for aero services, hence pricing
undecided. - SLAs yet to be defined.
- Inmarsat only liable for acts of gross
negligence, wilful misconduct or fraud. - Damages limited to US1M or previous 12 months
wholesale charges - Not clear yet if this will apply to aero
- Whatever arrangement is in place will flow on to
ANSPs. -
20WP2 - Competitive Issues
- Two types of competition need to be considered.
- Inter-Service Competition
- Competition for satellite service provision
- Intra-Service Competition
- Competition within the supply chain between DPs,
CSPs, etc. -
21WP 2 Risk Safety and Technical
- Can be broken down to Operational and Technical
Risk - Operational effect of failures, certification
levels, SLAs - Technical obsolescence, refurbishment,
life-cycle planning. - Conclusions
- Operational
- CNS systems must remain the tools of ATM
- Increased certification levels will make costs
prohibitive - Even with the highest availability levels
failures will happen, hence workarounds are
needed - Commercial pressures will force DPs, CSPs to be
more responsive. - SLAs must cover more than techical performance
- Notification procedures, thresholds, escalation
procedures, fault handling.
22WP 2 Risk Safety and Technical
- Conclusions (contd)
- With no backup satellite, satellite failure is
the biggest risk - SwiftBroadband , as currently planned, can only
be a supplementary means of communication for
critical communications - Additional satellites can remedy this
- Technical
- Life-Cycle Planning essential (for Inmarsat, DPs,
CSPs) - Plans for technological obsolescence needed
- Regular capacity planning
- Satellite Datalink traffic has doubled recently
- Avoidance of proprietary system components
- Alternatives needed for spares/upgrades
23WP2 Risk Financial/Commercial
- Financial/Commercial Risk could affect both
Service Providers and end-users. - First the Service Providers
- Financial returns need to be adequate to fund
capacity expansion. - Experience with the Classic service has been
that Inmarsat and SITA have funded capacity
improvements for Earth Stations that they neither
own nor operate. - Change in Inmarsat business model will help
overcome this issue - Flat Price pricing models will hamper growth.
- These can be used if reviewed regularly or
limited to specialised or niche services. - Charges must bear some relationship to traffic
levels.
24WP2 Risk Financial/Commercial
- For End-Users
- Safety-related services longevity, stability
- A monopoly position would provide this however
end-users would not enjoy the benefits of
competition - Competitive Price Pressure
- Improved Customer Service
- Rapid service introduction
- Most importantly, alternatives should a provider
fail financially - ICAO Acceptability Criteria require AMS(R)S
providers to commit to provide service for six
years. - what happens when/if that provider fails
financially?
25WP2 Risk Financial/Commercial
- End-Users (contd)
- However we shouldnt have too much of a good
thing! - Why?
- Erosion of profit margins limits future
investment. - Instability providers entering and leaving
market. - Modest competition is the solution
- Benefits forthcoming without loss of financial
incentives. - The solution
- Strict enforcement of standards
- Natural barrier to entry
- Ensures portability.
- Guaranteed minimum service lifetime
- ICAO acceptability criteria a good start, needs
to apply to all providers - Reduced barriers to entry for non-performance/safe
ty related issues. - COTS not proprietary solutions.
26WP 3 - Aircraft Architecture
- Target is to achieve significant equipage levels
for both long-haul and short-haul/smaller
aircraft to be useful as complementary system - Long-haul aircraft are more likely to be equipped
with High Gain Antenna SwiftBroadband system - Short-haul/smaller aircraft unlikely unless small
physical size and significantly cheaper - Low gain system can be considered the common
denominator - Main issue to overcome is interruption of service
due to manoeuvring of aircraft because of antenna
keyholes - Less of an issue for oceanic operation
27WP3 - Interfaces To Cockpit-Data
- Current interface is
- Data2/Williamsburg/Arinc 429 (FANS 1/A)
- Data3/Williamsburg/Arinc 429 (ATN compatible)
- Key question is how this will migrate to the IP
environment supported by SwiftBroadband - Tunnel existing Data2/3 over IP
- Migrate to pure IP environment
- ICAO ACP is considering accommodating IP
- Where will this function reside
- In SDU?
- In another unit?
- Industry will need to consider this
28WP4 - Costs and Charges
- Infrastructure costs -
- SwiftBroadband service support will be more
complex (and expensive) due to - Higher traffic levels, higher data rates
- A much broader range of services
29WP4 - Capital Investments
- Avionics costs
- Long haul aircraft systems essentially paid for
by passenger/airline applications - Typical costs around 200-300K
- Short haul aircraft system justification may be
more difficult - more cost attributable to ATS
applications - low cost solution needed - target cost around
high end VHF radio - Target figure identified in earlier NexSAT
Steering Group meeting was in the order of 50k
30WP4 - Recurring Costs
- Satellite Operator - space segment and ground
station operating costs, service support systems - DPs/CSPs network support costs, performance
reporting, accounting/billing, customer support,
help-desk - Both entities also incur GSA costs as well as
the costs to promote and market the respective
services - For DPs/CSPs, ATS represent premium services
- Higher performance levels and reporting
- Stricter SLAs
- More customer support
- More industry support required
31WP4 Market Size
- Market Size somewhat uncertain uptake of new
services will determine success or otherwise. - Likely evolutionary paths are as follows
- New aircraft will be equipped with SBB (or
equivalents) - Existence of new passenger services will
encourage greater use - Web-surfing, streaming applications, VPN, e-mail
- New services may encourage airlines to equip
short-haul and even regional aircraft - An ATS mandate will increase penetration further
- We believe that this progression will occur in
sequence
32WP4 - Scenarios
33WP4 Traffic Projections
- Inmarsat traffic projection model populated
during the study gives the results for the
scenarios - Some observations
- The wide variation in outcomes means that
providers must assume a large amount of risk. - Providers are optimistic however this is based on
three key provisions - Low-cost avionics will support equipage on
Short-Haul and Regional aircraft. - Surveys reveal that a large proportion of
business travellers would use their own
cell-phone if they could. - By 2015 a whole generation of travellers will
have grown up with cell-phones and the internet.
They will want to stay in touch!
34WP4 Charging Models
- A range of possibilities
- the pay as you go model
- the fixed-price model
- DPs/CSPs prefer schemes where revenue is linked
to usage - Automatically helps fund capacity/service
improvements - End-Users prefer the all-inclusive fixed price
model - Predictable costs, ease of budgeting
- The likely outcome will be.
35WP4 Future Charging Schemes
- Indications are that most airlines will make use
of fixed-fee, multilink agreements - Fee will be related to fleet size for airlines
- Stepped traffic allowances (to protect DPs, CSPs)
- Multilink means that the same fee will apply
regardless of the link used - ATS services will still be considered premium
services
36WP4 - Way ahead
- As mentioned under Institutional Issues,
distribution agreements for SwiftBroadband have
yet to be negotiated - Until DPs know the wholesale price that they will
be charged it is impossible to determine a
realistic final user charge - These are all subject to negotiation and hence
are confidential - What can be said is that unit prices will be
significantly lower - Usage will affect charge significantly
37WP4 - Price Determination Process
38WP4 - Communication Service pricing
- Various price models have been explored
- Factors that will finally determine the
SwiftBroadband pricing policy include, but will
not be limited to - several pricing options and rates - finalised six
months before the service launch - Pricing of ATS messaging will have to take into
account the specialised and significant
infrastructure and support facilities needed for
an aeronautical service
39WP4 Enterprise (land) pricing
- Charging for BGAN land-mobile services is volume
sensitive. When purchased in bulk by way of a
package- plan, prices for the background IP
service can vary between US3.75 to US6.95 per
Megabyte. - Voice services are not categorised according to
traffic types and typically carry a charge of
around a US1.00 per minute for regular circuit
switched traffic.
40Conclusions (1/2)
- Initial SwiftBroadband services aimed at
passenger and some airline applications - SwiftBroadband appears to have potential for ATS
provision - Meets capacity requirements in COCR Phase 1
- Will not meet availability requirements as a
primary means - Lack of satellite redundancy
- Aircraft antenna coverage key holes when
manoeuvring - Current lack of priority and pre-emption
- IP versus ATN
- Offers potential as complementary system
- could have indirect benefit for ATS by handling
more capacity consuming AOC applications
41Conclusions (2/2)
- Enhancements to BGAN infrastructure to enhance
performance to meet ATS requirements possible - but investments need to be justified throughout
supply chain - More information of the performance of
SwiftBroadband will emerge as the service is
introduced - Unresolved issues will probably be addressed
through the ANASTASIA project