

Smart street lighting projects often stall on a familiar obstacle: getting devices connected consistently across borders without multiplying carrier contracts and operational overhead. 1NCE says its platform is now being paired with LEOTEK’s LEOLink Intelligent Lighting System to streamline international deployments of connected lighting infrastructure.
Street lighting is one of the most mature “smart city” use cases, but it remains surprisingly hard to industrialize at global scale. City-by-city procurement, varying cellular agreements, and the operational burden of activating and managing thousands of endpoints can turn what looks like a straightforward retrofit into a slow, regionally fragmented rollout.
That is the backdrop for a newly announced collaboration between IoT connectivity platform provider 1NCE and LEOTEK, which supplies intelligent traffic solutions and smart lighting. The companies say they are working together to accelerate international deployments of LEOTEK’s LEOLink Intelligent Lighting System (ILS), using 1NCE’s software and connectivity platform to reduce dependency on local carrier contracting.
From local SIM logistics to “ship, install, connect”
The practical promise here is operational simplicity. LEOTEK positions the integration as enabling municipalities to convert traditional street lighting into what it calls “high-performance digital grids”, with “zero-touch global deployment”. In concrete terms, the annoucement argues that using the 1NCE platform removes the need for local carrier contracts and allows “thousands of devices to be deployed instantly across 170+ countries”.
For IoT practitioners, that claim goes to a recurring pain point in connected infrastructure: scaling device connectivity beyond a single geography. When every city or country requires its own negotiation, provisioning workflow, and support model, it becomes difficult to standardize deployments, maintain consistent device behavior, and forecast operating costs.
1NCE frames its role as providing global cellular IoT connectivity plus a software layer for device data collection and management. “Smart infrastructure projects benefit when connectivity is simple to deploy and straightforward to operate”, said Hitoshi Ono, Senior Vice President of 1NCE. “By supporting LEOTEK’s connected lighting deployments with global cellular IoT connectivity, we help enable efficient rollout and scalable operations – so cities can focus on outcomes like improved maintenance planning and better asset visibility”.
LEOTEK, for its part, is emphasizing that bundling global connectivity with its lighting system is intended to remove “roaming hurdles” and the complexity of managing multiple local arrangements. Torrent Chin, President and Chief Sustainability Officer of LEOTEK, said: “By combining our intelligent lighting capabilities with global IoT connectivity, we aim to help municipalities modernize street lighting with better operational transparency and long-term efficiency”.
Why it matters for smart infrastructure programs
This collaboration lands at an interesting moment for smart-city infrastructure. Many municipalities have already proven the value of basic remote monitoring and control, but expanding beyond pilots and single-city deployments typically exposes the less glamorous realities: provisioning at scale, ongoing connectivity administration, and lifecycle operations across years-long asset lifetimes.
In that sense, the 1NCE-LEOTEK approach is less about inventing a new smart lighting concept than it is about tightening the plumbing that makes deployments repeatable. For systems integrators and OEMs, the key question is often not whether connected lighting works, but whether a deployment model can be standardized across regions without re-engineering commercial and operational processes each time.
The announcement also points to real-world rollouts where the integrated model is already in use. It says the joint approach is operational across “high-density urban environments and critical energy projects”, citing deployments in Boston, Syracuse, and Fort Wayne where traditional lamps were upgraded to smart nodes with remote monitoring. It also mentions adoption by the DTE Energy project in Michigan and an expansion to San Francisco, as well as cross-border extensions across metropolitan areas in Mexico and South America.
For city technology teams evaluating smart lighting, the announcement is a reminder that connectivity strategy is not a footnote—it shapes deployment speed and long-term operations. If 1NCE and LEOTEK can package connectivity and device management in a way that reduces per-market friction, it could make it easier for municipalities to replicate projects across districts, sister cities, or multi-country programs without rebuilding the connectivity stack each time.
The post 1NCE teams with LEOTEK to simplify global cellular connectivity for smart street lighting rollouts appeared first on IoT Business News.
















