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Telefónica and Sateliot target hybrid 5G-satellite coverage for defense and remote operations

Telefónica and Sateliot target hybrid 5G-satellite coverage for defense and remote operations

Telefónica and Sateliot target hybrid 5G-satellite coverage for defense and remote operations

By Marc Kavinsky, Lead Editor at IoT Business News.

Telefónica España and Sateliot have signed a collaboration agreement to develop 5G NR non-terrestrial network solutions that combine terrestrial mobile infrastructure with LEO satellites. The move is aimed at extending coverage into remote and disconnected environments, with a particular focus on security, defense and other critical operations.

One of the persistent limits of cellular connectivity is that it still depends on geography. For industrial sites, maritime operations, border areas or temporary mission-critical deployments, terrestrial coverage gaps remain a practical constraint even as private 5G networks become more capable. That is the backdrop for the latest agreement between Telefónica España and Sateliot, which is centered on linking terrestrial 5G with satellite infrastructure rather than treating the two as separate connectivity domains.

The companies said they will work together on 5G NR-based non-terrestrial network technology, building a hybrid architecture that combines terrestrial mobile networks with low Earth orbit satellites. The stated objective is to extend connectivity into remote, maritime and otherwise unconnected areas, while also supporting critical services in security and defense environments.

What makes this announcement stand out is the technical direction. A large share of satellite IoT partnerships still revolve around parallel service models, where satellite is added as a separate layer for specific devices, applications or contracts. Here, the emphasis is on 3GPP-aligned convergence around 5G NR-NTN and on interoperability with terrestrial 5G networks, including what Telefónica describes as 5G tactical bubbles. That points to an architectural approach in which satellite coverage is being positioned as an extension of mobile infrastructure, not simply as an emergency overlay.

The agreement also goes beyond generic coverage language. Telefónica will focus on adapting 5G NR for defense and security requirements, including terrestrial integration and military interoperability, while Sateliot will contribute its LEO-based satellite connectivity platform for 5G NTN IoT services. The two companies also plan to develop pilots and advanced satellite connectivity functions for critical communications.

That detail matters because interoperability is usually where hybrid terrestrial-satellite projects become difficult. A pilot focused on validating how different network types work together suggests the real challenge is no longer only link availability, but service continuity across very different operating conditions. In practical terms, that means the value here is less about adding another coverage footprint and more about determining whether devices, network policies and operational workflows can move cleanly between terrestrial and non-terrestrial access.

For OEMs and system integrators, this is a relevant distinction. If satellite connectivity is developed within a standards-based 5G framework, it can reduce the need for entirely separate device strategies for remote operations. That does not remove integration complexity, especially in defense-grade environments, but it does indicate a path toward using existing cellular concepts such as roaming, SIM-based identity and common network management models across a wider coverage domain.

The background to this partnership also helps explain why the announcement is more than a first-contact memorandum. Telefónica and Sateliot said they had already carried out an end-to-end test in 2023, supervised by ESA, validating standard roaming between Telefónica’s network and Sateliot’s LEO network using a conventional SIM card. That earlier work was focused on mobile-satellite convergence for IoT continuity. The new agreement shifts the conversation toward operational use cases and 5G NR capabilities for more demanding scenarios.

From a broader market perspective, this reflects a wider change in satellite IoT. The conversation is moving away from isolated satellite connectivity offers toward integration with mainstream cellular standards and operator environments. That matters for connectivity providers because it opens the possibility of extending service footprints without forcing enterprises into entirely separate communications stacks. It also matters for industrial and public-sector users that need resilience in places where terrestrial coverage is unavailable, intermittent or intentionally temporary.

There is also a clear strategic angle in the sectors named by the companies. Security and defense use cases place a premium on coverage continuity, network resilience and deployable communications. A hybrid model that links terrestrial 5G with LEO satellite access is therefore not just about remote telemetry. It is about supporting operations in environments where infrastructure may be sparse, mobile or compromised.

For the IoT ecosystem, the significance of this deal lies in that convergence point. Sateliot brings satellite NTN capability, while Telefónica contributes terrestrial 5G integration and sector-specific adaptation. If the pilots confirm workable interoperability, the result could offer a more operationally coherent model for extending 5G-based IoT and critical communications beyond the practical edge of the cellular grid.

The post Telefónica and Sateliot target hybrid 5G-satellite coverage for defense and remote operations appeared first on IoT Business News.

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