Advertisement
 
Nauru: a tiny territory with large leverage PDF Print E-mail
By Michael Schwartz   
08 Jan 2008 at 11:10

Analysis, Digital Divide, Satellite, Broadband, Nauru. Asia-Pacific: For most of the last century, Nauru relied on one source of income, phosphates. As is all too often the case with minerals, the primary resource exhausts itself, and as is all too often the case with a developing nation, there is no other source of income for its people.

ImageNauru did attempt a more financially-oriented method of winning overseas currency - it set itself up as a tax haven. Even this failed and after 2001 (and in an extraordinary twist) Nauru entered into an agreement with one of its larger neighbours. The Australian government gave Nauru money in exchange for Nauru becoming a detention centre for people seeking asylum in Australia.

Swansat's involvement came three years later when the Government of Nauru allowed it to file its application for deployment of its satellite system. The key lies in the fact that Nauru is an ITU member. This gave Swansat the opening it was looking for.

Nauru granted the licences in March 2004. Next, an Advanced Publication Information statement was filed by Swansat before the ITU and on behalf of the Republic of Nauru in April 2004. By mid-2005, filing procedures had been commenced before the ITU with respect to recognition of Nauru's grants to Swansat of GSO orbital slot allocations and W-band assignments for the first Swansat constellation of spacecraft. The assignments in turn include 71 GHz-76 GHz and 81-GHz-86-GHz spectra located in Band 11 of the extremely high frequency 30-GHz to 300-GHz band.

For all its small size and a population of just 13,000, Nauru has the authority as an ITU member-state to license companies to operate space stations in W-Band. And this is exactly the commercial opportunity that Swansat is now exploiting. Both Nauru and Swansat are keen to stress that this is neither some case of a big corporation taking advantage of a poor country nor the situation of a desperate country grasping at a last economic straw. Instead, by adopting an economic-business model which is admittedly unusual and probably unique, both parties believe that Swansat will not only bring ubiquitous converged communications capabilities to the world and prosperity back to the Republic of Nauru but will also demonstrate that the economic model can go some way towards bridging the Digital Divide.

Even in the short-term and on a more localised basis, Swansat is providing the Republic of Nauru with free access to its system for educational use.

more info: www.swansat.com

 
< Prev   Next >
Related Items
Advertisement
DevelopingTelecoms Quick Surveys
What is the most important issue affecting ICT growth in emerging markets?
Fixed wire telephony has a future in developing countries?
Wimax or LTE for emerging markets?
Advertisement
04 Jul 2008 at 21:02
Get regular updates via RSS
User log in
Diamond Sponsor
Advertisement
Sponsors
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Newsletter
Image
Keep up to date with the latest information on ICTs in developing and emerging markets. Sign up for our regular newsletter. Click here
 
Sponsored Events
CEE Com

ImageDate: 17-18 September 2008

Location:   Clarion Congress Hotel, Prague, Czech Republic

Organiser: Com World Series

Read more...