Vocus Partners With Telesat to Build low Earth Orbit Landing Station

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Specialist Australian digital infrastructure provider Vocus will build a lightspeed low Earth orbit landing station in New South Wales for Telesat and provide fibre connectivity to Telesat’s point of presence, connecting Telesat’s LEO satellite constellation to terrestrial networks, providing secure, low-latency satellite services across the region.

“Vocus is an ideal partner to deliver the resilient, scalable terrestrial Infrastructure that not only serves as a key interconnect point for customer data but also further strengthens Australia’s digital infrastructure resilience,” said Telesat’s Chief Network and Information Officer Asit Tandon.

“Telesat will begin launching its LEO satellites in late 2026, and this new landing station will play a key role in satellite testing and customer field trials before global service delivery.”

“We’re proud to be partnering with Telesat on establishing its network in Australia,” said Ashley Neale, Head of Vocus Space and Wireless Operations. “Vocus already has 30 ground stations currently in operation or contracted to be built, demonstrating that our infrastructure provides the critical reliability needed for LEO networks.”

The long-term agreement also includes Telesat Lightspeed services when the network becomes operational. These services, backed by committed information rates and comprehensive service level agreements, will ensure resilient, low-latency connectivity for Vocus’ enterprise and government customers, complementing its already substantial LEO satellite services customer base.

“We’re honoured that Vocus will be integrating our MEF 3.0 compliant Telesat Lightspeed Carrier Ethernet services to its portfolio to meet the secure, mission-critical requirements of their customers in Australia, as well as their distributed networks across the globe,” said Telesat’s Chief Commercial Officer Glenn Katz.

“In addition to public networking options via Telesat’s global Landing Stations, our flexible architecture includes options for Private Access Stations, special security add-ons, and the ability for Vocus’ customers to maintain complete control over encryption, providing valuable, differentiated capabilities in their LEO portfolio,” he added.

A unique feature of the Telesat Lightspeed service will be its Terminal-to-Terminal direct connectivity capability, which eliminates the need for terrestrial links for customers transmitting especially sensitive information.

“This will enable, for example, a naval vessel to communicate via the Telesat Lightspeed satellites directly with ground-deployed soldiers via the optical laser-linked space network, completely bypassing land-based infrastructure or the public internet,” continued Neale.

“This capability will be extremely valuable to customers with mission-critical communications requirements and a desire to preserve data sovereignty even outside of Australia’s geographic borders.”

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