News clipping: No, No, No! No Terrestrial Service In Ku-Band : Satnews Publishers.
The global satellite communications sector has opposed a proposal made at the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to allow terrestrial fixed services to operate in the 14.0-14.5 GHz band. This is a move that would cause harmful interference to fixed and mobile satellite-based services currently being provided to millions of users throughout the nation. Following successive meetings held recently with the FCC, the Global VSAT Forum (GVF) filed comments late last week jointly with the European Satellite Operators Association (ESOA), calling upon the U.S. regulatory agency to dismiss a Petition for Rulemaking submitted by the Utilities Telecom Council and Winchester Cator, LLC. The two non-profit associations called upon the FCC to determine that the petition to permit shared, secondary terrestrial fixed service (FS) use of the 14.0-14.5 GHz band is “ill-conceived, technically flawed, and glaringly unjustified.” As GVF and ESOA show in their opposition, the petitioners’ proposal would not protect present and future fixed-satellite service (FSS) operations from harmful interference, and indeed would likely result in harmful interference even at modest deployment levels. The proposed secondary FS would likely cause significant amounts of harmful interference whose source primary FSS licensees in the 14.0-14.5 GHz band would not be able to identify.