Rivada brushes off regulatory setback for proposed broadband constellation
TAMPA, Fla. — Rivada Space Networks remains confident it can reclaim priority Ka-band spectrum rights for nearly 600 proposed broadband satellites, more than two months after Liechtenstein’s telecoms regulator rescinded its license.
“We continue to discuss the matter with the regulator, and we are confident that we can reach an agreement to use the Liechtenstein filings,” Rivada spokesperson Brian Carney said Dec. 13.
Carney said Liechtenstein’s Office for Communications (AK) withdrew its spectrum filing at the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), an arm of the United Nations, over “a difference of opinion about the timing of the deposit of a performance bond with the regulator,” but declined to give details.
AK director Rainer Schnepfleitner also declined to discuss what...