Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a great pleasure to be here today at GTM 2008 – among so
many colleagues and old friends.
As many of you know, I have been passionately involved with
satellites and the satellite industry myself, since my early days at university
in Mali. Indeed, I was fortunate enough to spend over 11 years working with our
hosts here today, Intelsat, before I moved to ICO and then to ITU in Geneva.
As the world's largest provider of fixed satellite services,
Intelsat has been hosting GTM for over 30 years, providing an unrivalled forum
for bilateral trading.
I am very grateful therefore that the theme chosen for this
year’s event is ‘Connect the World’ – since this is one of our principal
missions today at the ITU.
At the World Summit for the Information Society (WSIS) in 2005,
we committed to connecting the world’s unconnected by 2015 – bringing access to
ICTs to every village on the planet.
Progress in meeting this ambitious goal to ‘Connect the World’
has been more than impressive.
Take Africa, for example. A decade ago, in 1998, there were just
20 million telephone lines serving – or indeed under-serving – the entire
African continent. Today, however, Africa has over 300 million fixed and mobile
subscribers, and over 50 million Internet users.
As the Secretary-General of an organization which is ‘committed
to connecting the world’, I cannot tell you how much this progress means to me.
As you know, ITU firmly believes that by connecting the world,
and fulfilling everyone’s fundamental right to communicate, the world will
become a better and a safer place. It will also become a more positive and more
equitable place to do business.
My friends,
Technologies such as Space communications and ground-based mobile
communications, fibre-optics and broadband wireless have done a huge amount in a
very short space of time to bring many more of the world’s people into the ICT
fold, and will continue to do so.
But I believe that satellite communications must play a bigger role in bridging
the digital divide and connect the underserved and remote areas to the rest of
world. I was just a small boy in Mali when the first artificial satellite,
Sputnik, was launched into space in 1957, and I have been a passionate believer
in the power of satellites ever since.
Satellite technology can help us bridge the digital divide and
meet those ambitious WSIS targets.
No other technology can so quickly achieve large-scale coverage of
widely-dispersed populations, or deliver quality connectivity to remote and
isolated areas. If we can connect the furthest offshore sailor at sea and the
mountaineer climbing an isolated mountain peak, then surely we can also connect
the world’s remaining unconnected villages as well?
It is my view that the satellite industry has too often been absent from the
development sphere.
We are all aware, of course, that building, launching and operating satellites
is an expensive business, and that satellite capacity has historically been too
costly for many people in the developing world.
Buty there are now exciting initiatives underway which are destined to change
all that.
Notable among these is the Global Broadband Satellite Infrastructure Initiative
(GBSI), which is one of the ITU’s ‘Connect the World’ projects.
Under the leadership of the ITSO, the GBSI is a public-private partnership which
aims to leverage the power of satellite technology to promote affordable access
to high-speed Internet services to under-served, remote and sparsely populated
areas around the world. In the short to medium-term, existing excess satellite
capacity will be used.
The GBSI is particularly interesting, because it recognizes the importance of
three components in achieving this goal and establishing a framework for
satellite broadband service. These three components are the identification of
harmonized frequency spectrum worldwide; the use of an open and global
transmission standard; and the harmonization of the relevant regulatory
principles.
If this can be achieved, then there is no reason why access to high-speed
Internet services via satellite cannot be delivered at prices and conditions
which are comparable to terrestrial broadband technologies.
Ladies and gentlemen,
There is another crucial area where satellite communications make all the
difference in connecting people – as we have all seen so heart-rendingly in the
past month on our television screens.
That area is emergency communications.
When a disaster occurs – such as the cyclone in Myanmar, or the earthquake in
China – terrestrial networks are often damaged, but satellites continue to do
their job, far off in space, keeping people connected, helping coordinate vital
relief efforts, saving lives and protecting communities.
Last month ITU was one of the very first agencies to arrive in Myanmar with
telecommunications resources after the cyclone hit there, and was also quick to
send satellite equipment to China after the terrible earthquake on 12 May – with
the rapid deployment being made possible under the ITU Framework for Cooperation
in Emergencies.
Satellite communication systems can play a key role in minimizing the effects of
natural disasters through remote sensing and early warning systems. In
confronting the global challenge of climate change, ITU is therefore
intensifying its activities in integrating ICTs into disaster preparedness.
Since July last year, we have provided ICT relief services to the Americas,
Africa, and Asia and Pacific regions.
Esteemed colleagues,
Governments, international organizations and businesses all need to recognize
that the world has finally moved beyond aid and charity in delivering
connectivity. Long-term prosperity depends instead on mobilizing investment and
business resources.
It is no crime to expect a return on investment. Indeed, quite the opposite – if
a virtuous circle of investment, profit and further investment is to be created,
along with jobs, sustainable development, and a thriving economy.
In closing, I would therefore like to invite you to join ITU in helping connect
the unconnected, and to work together with us to ensure that the essential role
and future potential of satellite communications are not neglected. That way, we
can bring the undeniable benefits of ICTs to the last villages, hospitals and
schools which still lack any form of connectivity.
We have set ourselves very ambitious targets, but I firmly believe they can be
achieved. And the satellite industry will play a key role in helping us achieve
them.
Thank you.