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When Networks Fail, Satellite Keeps People & Operations Connected

November 10, 2025
When Networks Fail, Satellite Keeps People & Operations Connected

Many organisations assume cellular networks will be available when needed most - until a storm, outage, or disaster proves otherwise.

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Globalstar has  released two reports revealing how satellite IoT and two-way communications are now critical to emergency response, lone worker safety, and network resilience - especially where telcos and public-safety teams are responsible for maintaining service continuity.

In these reports, readers will learn how organisations are:

  • Maintaining constant communication with lone workers, emergency responders, and field crews, even when cellular networks collapse.
  • Enabling real-time two-way control, allowing remote devices and sensors to take action instantly, not just report data.
  • Improving business continuity and disaster preparedness by adding satellite as a resilient connectivity layer.
  • Reducing truck rolls and manual interventions through remote diagnostics and automated actions from the field.

For telcos, satellite isn’t replacing cellular. It’s extending your network beyond its physical limits. By adding satellite as a secondary layer, telcos can offer new services for mission-critical communications, lone worker protection, and remote IoT automation. It becomes a revenue opportunity, not just a resilience measure.

For emergency and disaster response teams, satellite ensures that communication and visibility continue when towers are down, overloaded, or damaged. Teams can coordinate resources, track personnel, and receive real-time data from the field, even in areas where no terrestrial network exists.

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