Ubiik and Electricity Canada Launch 1.8GHz Private LTE Ecosystem for Utility Networks

Ubiik and Electricity Canada have launched the first 1.8 GHz private LTE ecosystem, collaborating with industry partners to enhance utility telecom networks across Canada.

Highlights

  • Ubiik and Electricity Canada establish 1.8 GHz private LTE ecosystem.
  • Project aims to fully utilise 1800-1830 MHz spectrum for utilities.
  • Successful pLTE lab pilot conducted in Vancouver.

Follow Us

Ubiik and Electricity Canada Launch 1.8GHz Private LTE Ecosystem for Utility Networks
Ubiik, a provider of private LTE systems, and utility provider Electricity Canada announced the successful establishment of the first 1.8 GHz private LTE (pLTE) ecosystem to support next-generation utility telecom networks in Canada. Built as a collaborative project between Ubiik, Electricity Canada, and several semiconductor and Advanced Meter Infrastructure (AMI) partners, Ubiik expects the continued expansion of this ecosystem.

Also Read: MTS Launches Private LTE Network at Kovdorsky GOK Mine




Collaboration with Industry Partners

Ubiik said chipset vendors and module providers Sequans, GCT, Semtech (formerly Sierra Wireless), and Sony Semiconductor Israel (Sony) have all now committed support for the Electricity Canada band, with AMI vendor Itron also planning to build meters for this band.

Expansion of Product Ecosystem

Canadian electric utilities hold sole rights to the 1800-1830 MHz band, but its potential has remained untapped due to limited vendor support. Ubiik, as a corporate partner to Electricity Canada and in collaboration with utilities in Canada, led the project to expand the ecosystem of products available for this band, ensuring the spectrum's full utilisation for the benefit of utilities and citizens and opening new market opportunities, the company said.

"When we started working with Electricity Canada on the 1.8 GHz band in October last year, there was no support for this band from LTE vendors," says Ubiik. "To have 30 MHz of spectrum allocated solely for utility use is the envy of utilities across the world. We therefore made it our mission to create and strengthen the 1.8 GHz ecosystem through collaborating with our industry partners."

Also Read: Verizon to Expand Private 5G Network Offerings

Challenges and Future Applications

"Historically, equipment vendors have not supported 1.8 GHz due to the lack of designation as a standard 3GPP band and the perceived size of the Canadian utility telecom infrastructure market," the official release said.  "In addition to metering, Canadian utilities are expected to use the 1.8 GHz band for distribution automation, monitoring of generation and transmission facilities, as well as communication between substations and operations centers."

In addition to securing partners to support 1.8 GHz, Ubiik said it has continued progress with this band with the recent successful pLTE lab pilot in Vancouver.

Reported By

Telecom Analyst

Passionately following the Indian #Telecom Industry for over a decade from Business, Consumer and a Technical perspective. My primary focus area is Consumer & Digital Experience.

Recent Comments

Shivraj Roy :

Kinda out of topic I’m currently onboard the 12809 Mumbai Howrah Mail I have two sim cards Vi & Jio…

Nokia to Deploy 3,300 New Sites for Vodafone Idea by…

TheAndroidFreak :

Update: No hard cap on some of the prepaid sims. Reaching 180Mbps on 1-3-8 combination.

Airtel CEO Hints at New Structure for Mobile Tariffs to…

TheAndroidFreak :

Jio doesn't have 4CA at all in my opinion. Airtel won't have 4CA at all even after three years when…

Airtel CEO Hints at New Structure for Mobile Tariffs to…

Faraz :

Oh wow. This is pleasure to the eyes.. My smartphone has connected to 4 CA in Jio but for very…

Airtel CEO Hints at New Structure for Mobile Tariffs to…

TheAndroidFreak :

BSNL working great on VoLTE? What's the status of BSNL in Mumbai? Or is it MTNL who is going to…

Airtel CEO Hints at New Structure for Mobile Tariffs to…

Load More
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments