TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION

New satellite-4G combination to help farmers connect

SATELLITE communications company Pivotel has announced a new network solution for agriculture using a combination of 4G wireless and satellite technology for long-range connectivity.

Kristy Moroney
New satellite-4G combination to help farmers connect

The new product known as ecoSphere works by using solar and battery powered 4G base stations connected to sensors and tracking 4G and satellite information across an entire farming operation.

The network created by the ecoSphere system allows farmers to access long range connectivity to video, data and remote monitoring of assets and employees, all over a private network.

Pivotel Group CEO Peter Bolger said the custom designed mobile network uses 4G and satellite connectivity to create an entirely new offering for the Australian agricultural industry, focusing on safety and improved efficiencies.

 "We are very proud to launch ecoSphere by Pivotel, an Australian-first system designed to solve the communication and connectivity needs of staff working and communicating in remote areas," Mr Peter Bolger.

Mr Bolger believes Pivotel has developed a highly affordable system and service that stands apart from other mobile carriers thanks to the group's expertise, unique network design and customer service.

"Our dedicated customer service team, product development and dealer network groups work hand-in-hand to offer tailor made and cost effective solutions to meet any problem faced by consumers and business entities, no matter how complex," he said.

"The radio network is designed to ensure agreed data rates and reliability metrics are delivered to all points on the site and the on-site local core network ensures the farm can continue to operate even when the off-site data link is down."

Mr Bolger said this new communication system from Pivotel can be installed and operated at a fraction of the cost typically charged by the large mobile carriers and will help deliver significant operational savings, particularly agriculture where the cost of implementing such solutions in the past have been prohibitive.

However reform to the telecommunications universal service obligation (USO) is ongoing, due to problems between major service providers Vodafone, Telstra and Optus over wholesale mobile domestic roaming agreements and competition for the federal government's mobile blackspot program.

A draft report into the nation's telecommunications USO in December showed major phone carriers claim to cover up to 99.3% of the population, which equates to about 31% of the country's landmass. Leaving regional and remote and Australia vastly under connected.

The Australian government's National Broadband Network (NBN) is also providing Sky Muster satellite services to the remotest 3% of Australia's population via the projection of 101 spot beams, but has faced complaints concerning connectivity and service faults.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Farming Ahead team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Farming Ahead team.

editions

Research Report: Sheds

Sheds play a vital role in farming, offering shelter and protection for people, machinery, livestock and valuable inputs like chemicals and fertiliser.

editions

Research Report: Harvest Weed Seed Mills

The Report includes a round up of commercially-available batching plants as well as farmer-made approaches.

editions

Research Report: Agritechnica 2023

Kondinin Group’s Mark Saunders, Ben White and Josh Giumelli went to Agritechnica, Germany. This report covers the key award winners from the event and some of the latest autonomous platforms displayed.

editions

Research Report: Fronting Up

This Research Report looks at harvester fronts including research and expertise from Kondinin Group’s Ben White, with input from harvesting specialists Brett Asphar, Kassie Van Der Westhuizen, Murray Skayman and Martin Reichelt.