Orbcomm

This article is about the company. For the satellites, see Orbcomm (satellite).
ORBCOMM, Inc.
Wireless data networking
Industry Telecommunications
Founded 1993 by Orbital Sciences and Teleglobe
Headquarters Rochelle Park, New Jersey, United States
Key people
Chairman: Jerome (Jerry) Eisenberg
CFO: Robert G. Costantini
CEO: Marc Eisenberg
EVP Technology and Operations: John J. Stolte
Products satellite communications and integration services
Revenue $178.3 million USD (2015)
Number of employees
560
Website www.orbcomm.com

ORBCOMM (NASDAQ: ORBC) is an American company that offers machine to machine (M2M)[1] communications solutions designed to track, monitor, and control fixed and mobile assets in markets including transportation, heavy equipment, maritime, oil and gas, utilities and government. The company provides hardware devices, modems, web applications and data services delivered over multiple satellite and cellular networks.

As of May 2016, ORBCOMM has more than 1.6 million billable subscriber communicators,[2] serving Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) such as Caterpillar Inc., Doosan Infracore America, Hitachi Construction Machinery Co., Ltd., John Deere, Komatsu Limited, and Volvo Construction Equipment, as well as other customers such as C&S Wholesale Grocers, Canadian National Railways, CR England, Hub Group, KLLM Transport Services, Marten Transport, Swift Transportation, Target, Tropicana, Tyson Foods, Walmart and Werner Enterprises.[3]

ORBCOMM owns and operates a global network of 31 LEO communications satellites and accompanying ground infrastructure including 16 Gateway Earth Stations (GESs) around the world. ORBCOMM is licensed to provide service in more than 130 countries and territories worldwide.[4]

History

Founding and Low-Earth Orbit Satellite System Development

The ORBCOMM Low-Earth Orbit (LEO) system was conceived by Orbital Sciences Corporation (Orbital) in the late 1980s. In 1990, Orbital filed the world's first license application with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for the operation of a network of small LEO spacecraft[5] to provide global satellite services of commercial messaging and data communications services via the company's ORBCOMM program.

During the initial stages of the program, Orbital pursued a multi-pronged approach: regulatory approvals; ground infrastructure development and procurement of sites; modem development and country licensing. In 1992, the World Administrative Radio Conference (WARC) supported the spectrum allocation for Non-Voice, Non-Geostationary Mobile Satellite Service. With WARC approval, Orbital set up a specific ORBCOMM program for the development of satellites and ground infrastructure, and ORBCOMM became a wholly owned subsidiary of Orbital. In 1995, ORBCOMM was granted a full license to operate a network with up to 200,000 mobile Earth stations (MESs).

ORBCOMM began procuring Gateway Earth Station (GES) locations and contracted with a division of Orbital Sciences, located in Mesa, AZ, to develop and build four sets of GESs and associated spares. Land for the four GESs was procured or leased in Arizona, Washington, New York and Georgia.

After the 1992 WARC approval, ORBCOMM signed contracts with three modem developers and manufacturers: Kyushu Matsushita Electric Company, a division of Panasonic; Elisra Electronic Systems, an Israeli company with expertise in electronic warfare systems; and Torrey Science & Technology, a small San Diego-based company with long ties to Orbital Sciences. Panasonic provided the first ORBCOMM approved MES in March 1995. Elisra followed with the EL2000 in late 1995, and Torrey Science provided the ComCore 200 in April 1996.

During the development of equipment, ORBCOMM also pursued licensing and regulatory approvals in several countries. By 1995, ORBCOMM had obtained regulatory approval in 19 countries with a number of additional countries well into the regulatory process. ORBCOMM was also in initial negotiations with groups in Indonesia, EMEA and Italy for becoming ORBCOMM licensees as well as GES operators in their respective regions.

During the conceptual stages of the LEO satellite communications system, Orbital Sciences purchased a small company in Boulder, Colorado specializing in small satellite design. This company built the first three satellites in the ORBCOMM system: ORBCOMM X, Communications Demonstration Satellite (CDS) 1 and CDS 2. ORBCOMM X was lost after a single orbit. To validate the feasibility of commercially tracking and communicating with a LEO satellite, Orbital built an additional communications payload and flew this payload on an SR-71 in 1992. These tests were successful and work on CDS 1 and 2 continued. CDS 1 and CDS 2 were launched in February and April 1992 respectively. These satellites were used to further validate the design of the network and were showcased in Orbital’s plans to sign up an equity partner for the completion of the ORBCOMM System.

In June 1992, Orbital created an equal partnership called ORBCOMM Global L.P. with Teleglobe Mobile Partners (Teleglobe Mobile), an affiliate of Teleglobe Inc., for the design and development of the LEO satellite system. Teleglobe Mobile invested $85 million in the project and also provided international service distribution. Orbital agreed to construct and launch satellites for the ORBCOMM system and to construct the satellite control center, the network control center and four U.S. gateway Earth stations.

In April 1995, two satellites (F Plane) were launched, and in the summer the ORBCOMM global mobile data communications network was tested. Teleglobe Mobile invested an additional $75 million in the project that year and joined Orbital as a full joint-venture partner in ORBCOMM. In February 1996, ORBCOMM initiated the world's first commercial service for global mobile data communications provided by LEO satellites. ORBCOMM also raised an additional $170 million.[6] In October 1996, ORBCOMM licensed Malaysian partner Technology Resources Industries Bhd. (TRI) to sell ORBCOMM's global two-way messaging service in Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei. TRI became the owner of a 15% stake in ORBCOMM, Teleglobe owning 35% and the rest held by Orbital.[7]

In December 1997, ORBCOMM launched 8 satellites (A Plane). In 1998 ORBCOMM launched 2 satellites (G Plane) in February, 8 satellites (B Plane) in August and 8 satellites (C Plane) in September. After a short hiatus, ORBCOMM launched 7 more satellites (D Plane) in December 1999.

With the launch and operation of the C Plane satellites, ORBCOMM became the first commercial provider of global LEO satellite data and messaging communications services. ORBCOMM inaugurated full commercial service with its satellite-based global data communications network on November 30, 1998. In March 1998, the FCC expanded ORBCOMM’s original license from 36 to 48 satellites.[8]

In January 2000, Orbital halted funding of ORBCOMM, and Teleglobe and Orbital signed a new partnership agreement with 67% ownership to Teleglobe and 33% to Orbital.[9] In May 2000, Teleglobe ceased funding ORBCOMM. Like its voice-centric competitors Iridium and Globalstar, it filed for Chapter 11 protection, in September 2000.

New Ownership

In 2001, a group of private investors purchased ORBCOMM and its assets out of an auction process, and ORBCOMM LLC was organized on April 4, 2001. On April 23, 2001, this group of investors acquired substantially all of the non-cash assets of ORBCOMM Global L.P. and its subsidiaries, which included the in-orbit satellites and supporting U.S. ground infrastructure equipment that the company owns today. At the same time, ORBCOMM LLC also acquired the FCC licenses required to own and operate the communications system from a subsidiary of Orbital Sciences Corporation, which was not in bankruptcy, in a related transaction. ORBCOMM issued a public offering of stock in November 2006.[2] The company sold 9.23 million shares of common stock.

In September, 2007, ORBCOMM Inc was sued, for its IPO prospectus containing inaccurate statements of material fact. It failed to disclose that demand for the Company’s products was weakening. In 2009, a payment of $2,450,000 was agreed.[10]

In September 2009, ORBCOMM signed a contract with SpaceX to launch ORBCOMM’s next-generation OG2 satellite constellation.[11]

ORBCOMM launched its commercial Satellite Automatic Identification System (AIS) service in 2009.[12] AIS technology is used mainly for collision avoidance but also for maritime domain awareness, search and rescue, and environmental monitoring. AIS launched two additional satellites, VesselSat-1 and VesselSat-2, in January 2011 and October 2012 respectively.

On July 14, 2014 ORBCOMM launched six next generation OG2 satellites aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.

In December 2015, the company launched eleven OG2 satellites from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida with the launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. This dedicated launch marked ORBCOMM’s second and final OG2 mission to complete its next generation satellite constellation.[13]

Acquisitions

Since 2011, ORBCOMM has acquired a number of companies including:

StarTrak Systems
In 2011 ORBCOMM acquired StarTrak and its ReeferTrak and GenTrak brands, including devices and applications for tracking refrigerated trailers, assets and gensets. StarTrak’s customers included refrigerated unit manufacturers such as Carrier and Thermo King as well as companies such as Tropicana, Maersk Line, Prime Inc, CR England, FFE Transport, Inc. and Exel Transportation.
PAR Logistics Management Systems
In 2012, ORBCOMM acquired the assets of PAR Logistics Management Systems (PAR LMS), a subsidiary of PAR Technology Corporation and provider of monitoring solutions for transport assets and cargo.
MobileNet
In 2013, ORBCOMM acquired MobileNet, a provider of telematics solutions to the heavy equipment and rail support industries, with a platform geared toward heavy equipment Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs), dealers and fleet owners. MobileNet’s customers included Doosan North America as well as rail companies Union Pacific, CSX and BNSF.
GlobalTrak
Also in 2013, ORBCOMM acquired GlobalTrak, an information services company that uses networks, sensors and proprietary software platforms to provide container/vehicle tracking, awareness and intelligence for military, government and commercial customer applications.
SENS Asset Tracking
A third acquisition for ORBCOMM in 2013 was Comtech’s Sensor Enabled Notification System (SENS) operation—a provider of one-way satellite products and services. The SENS system, which consists of satellite-based tracking devices, a network hub and an Internet-based back-office platform, enables data retrieval via the Globalstar satellite network.
Euroscan
In 2014 ORBCOMM acquired Euroscan, a provider of refrigerated transportation temperature compliance recording systems used primarily for the transport of food and pharmaceuticals. As part of this transaction, in addition to acquiring Euroscan’s distribution channel in Europe and other geographies, ORBCOMM acquired Ameriscan, Euroscan’s North American subsidiary. At the time of the acquisition, Euroscan had a worldwide installed base of 200,000 recording units of which approximately 10,000 were wireless subscribers.[14]
InSync Software
In 2015, ORBCOMM acquired InSync Software—a provider of Internet of Things (IoT) enterprise solutions and software applications. The acquisition expanded InSync’s uniform software platform beyond RFID, cellular and sensor technologies to include satellite. InSync’s software enables sensor-driven asset tracking and remote monitoring applications.
SkyWave Mobile Communications
Also in 2015 ORBCOMM acquired SkyWave Mobile Communications—an M2M service provider on the Inmarsat global L-band satellite network. The addition of SkyWave’s higher bandwidth, lower-latency satellite products and services leverage IsatDataPro (IDP) technology, which is now jointly owned by ORBCOMM and Inmarsat. With the acquisition, SkyWave brought ORBCOMM more than 250,000 subscribers, 400 channel partners, and annualized revenues of over $60 million.[15]
WAM Technologies
In 2015 ORBCOMM also acquired WAM Technologies LLC (WAM), an affiliate of Mark-It Services, Inc. and provider of remote management and control solutions for ocean transport refrigerated containers and intermodal equipment. With the acquisition of WAM, ORBCOMM’s cold chain monitoring solutions now include trailers, railcars, gensets and sea containers.
Skygistics
In 2016 ORBCOMM acquired Skygistics (PTY) Ltd. and its South African and Australian subsidiaries. Skygistics provides satellite and cellular connectivity options as well as telematics solutions, and adds distribution for ORBCOMM’s products in South Africa and 22 other African nations.

Satellites

Main article: Orbcomm (satellite)

The first-generation OG1 satellites each weigh 42 kg (93 lb). Two disc-shaped solar panels articulate in 1-axis to track the sun and provide 160 watts of power. Communication with subscriber units is done using SDPSK modulation at 4800 bit/s for the downlink and 2400 bit/s for the uplink.

Each satellite has a 56 kbit/s backhaul that utilises the popular TDMA multiplexing scheme and QPSK modulation.[16] ORBCOMM is the only current satellite licensee operating in the 137-150 MHz VHF band, which was allocated globally for "Little LEO" systems. Several such systems were planned in the early to mid 1990s but ORBCOMM was the only one to successfully launch. In the continental United States, ORBCOMM statistically relays 90% of the text messages within six minutes, but gaps between satellites can result in message delivery times of 15 minutes or more. ORBCOMM reported during an earnings report call in early 2007 that 50% of subscriber-initiated reports (messages of six bytes in size) were received in less than 1 minute, 90% in less than 4 minutes and 98% in less than 15 minutes. With the current constellation of ORBCOMM satellites, there is likely to be a satellite within range of almost any spot on Earth at any time of the day or night. Every satellite has an on-board GPS receiver for positioning. Typical data payloads are 6 bytes to 30 bytes, adequate for sending GPS position data or simple sensor readings.

A total of 35 satellites were launched by ORBCOMM Global in the mid to late 1990s. Of the original 35, a total of 24 remain operational today, according to company filings. The plane F polar satellite, one of the original prototype first generation satellites launched in 1995, was retired in April 2007 due to intermittent service. Two additional satellites (one from each of Plane B and Plane D) were retired in 2008 also due to intermittent service. The other five satellites that are not operational experienced failures earlier. The absence of these eight satellites can increase system latency and decrease overall capacity. ORBCOMM has invested in replacement satellites as the first generation is at or nearing end of life. On 19 June 2008 six additional ORBCOMM satellites were launched with the Cosmos-3M rocket:[17] one ORBCOMM CDS weighing 80 kg, and five ORBCOMM Quick Launches weighing 115 kg each.[18][19] These new satellites were built by German OHB System AG (platform) and by Orbital Sciences Corporation (payload) and included a secondary AIS.[20][21] Design and production of the satellite platform was subcontracted by OHB System to Russian KB Polyot. On November 9, 2009 ORBCOMM filed a report to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission stating that since launch, communications capability for three of the quick-launch satellites and the CDS has been lost.[22] The failed satellites experienced attitude control system anomalies as well as anomalies with its power systems, which resulted in the satellites not pointing towards the sun and the earth as expected and as a consequence have reduced power generation. The company filed a $50 million claim with its insurers covering the loss of all six satellites[23] and received $44.5 million in compensation.

OG2

Main article: Orbcomm-OG2
SpaceX's Falcon 9 v1.1 rocket launched the ORBCOMM OG2 Mission 1 on July 14, 2014.

On 3 September 2009 a deal was announced between ORBCOMM and Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) to launch 18 second-generation satellites with SpaceX launch vehicles between 2010 and 2014.[24] SpaceX originally planned to use Falcon 1e rocket, but on March 14, 2011 it was announced that SpaceX will use Falcon 9 to carry the first two ORBCOMM next-generation OG2 satellites to orbit in 2011.[25] On Oct. 7, 2012, the first SpaceX Falcon 9 launch of a prototype OG2 ORBCOMM communications satellite from Cape Canaveral failed to achieve proper orbit and the company filed a $10 million claim with its insurers.[26] The ORBCOMM satellite was declared a total loss and burned up in the atmosphere upon rentry on October 10, 2012.[27]

On July 14, 2014 ORBCOMM launched six next generation OG2 satellites aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida. In September 2014, ORBCOMM announced that, after in-orbit testing, the six satellites had been properly spaced within their orbital planes and were processing over 20% of the network’s M2M traffic.[28] In June 2015, the company lost communication with one of the in-orbit OG2 satellites. The company recorded impairment charge of $12.7 million to write-off the net book value of this satellite as of June 30, 2015. The company stated that the loss of this one satellite is not expected to have a material adverse effect on network communications services.[29]

In October 2015, the company announced that SpaceX plans to launch eleven OG2 satellites from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on the next launch of the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. The satellites were deployed on December 21, 2015.[30] This dedicated launch marked ORBCOMM’s second and final OG2 mission to complete its next generation satellite constellation.[31]

Compared to its current OG1 satellites, ORBCOMM’s OG2 satellites are designed for faster message delivery, larger message sizes and better coverage at higher latitudes, while increasing network capacity. In addition, the OG2 satellites are equipped with an Automatic Identification System (AIS) payload to receive and report transmissions from AIS-equipped vessels for ship tracking and other maritime navigational and safety efforts.[32]

Network Services

ORBCOMM provides satellite data services. As of May 2016, ORBCOMM has more than 1.6 million billable subscriber communicators.[33] ORBCOMM has control centers in the United States, Brazil, Japan, and South Korea, as well as U.S. ground stations in New York, Georgia, Arizona, Washington and international ground stations in Curaçao, Italy, Australia, Kazakhstan, Brazil, Argentina, Morocco, Japan, South Korea, and Malaysia. Plans for additional ground station locations are under way.

The ORBCOMM satellite network is best suited for users who send small amounts of data. To avoid interference, terminals are not permitted to be active more than 1% of the time, and thus they may only execute a 450ms data burst twice every 15 minutes. The latency inherent in ORBCOMM's network design prevents it from supporting certain safety-critical applications.

ORBCOMM’s acquisition of SkyWave Mobile Communications in January 2015 gave the company access to higher bandwidth, lower-latency satellite products and services that leverage IsatData Pro (IDP) technology over Inmarsat's global L-band satellite network.

ORBCOMM's direct competition includes Globalstar's simplex services (which ORBCOMM also resells) and L-band leased capacity services such as those offered by SkyBitz. ORBCOMM's most significant competitor is Iridium Communications, which offers the Iridium SBD service, which features data packet, latency and antenna capabilities similar to that of IDP technology, which is now jointly owned by ORBCOMM and Inmarsat.

ORBCOMM satellite services can be easily integrated with business applications. Customer data can be retrieved or auto-forwarded via SMTP or HTTP/XML feed directly over the Internet or through a dedicated link.[34]

ORBCOMM also partners with seven different cellular providers to offer wireless connectivity, cellular airtime data plans and SIM cards for M2M and IoT applications.[35]

ORBCOMM's other network service business is Automatic Identification System, or AIS, which is a widely deployed system used to track ocean vessels. Six satellites with AIS capability were launched in June 2008, referred to as the Quick Launch satellites. However, all six satellites eventually failed prematurely. When ORBCOMM’s next generation satellites launched on July 14, 2014, each one was equipped with an Automatic Identification System (AIS) payload to receive and report transmissions from AIS-equipped vessels for ship tracking and other maritime applications. ORBCOMM combines its satellite AIS data with a variety of terrestrial feeds to track over 150,000 vessels daily for over 100 customers in a variety of government and commercial organizations.[36]

Hardware

Devices

ORBCOMM offers cellular, satellite and dual-mode hardware devices for M2M tracking, monitoring and control applications, for a variety of industry applications.

Modems

ORBCOMM’s interchangeable OG2 (OG2-M and OG2-GPS) and OG-ISAT (IsatData Pro L-Band) satellite modems feature an identical footprint (smaller than a credit card), connectors, power input, programming environment, communication interface and protocols. ORBCOMM’s SkyWave IDP 200 Series packaged satellite modems operate over Inmarsat’s IsatData Pro network.

Sensors

ORBCOMM offers a variety of sensors for M2M applications including a multi-zone cargo sensor, trailer or container door sensor, hook/unhook trailer sensor, fuel level sensor and temperature sensor.

Antennas

Antennas for ORBCOMM’s IDP service have a small form factor, and are similar to the ones used in the other L-band (1.5-1.6 GHz) satellite networks (Iridium, Globalstar). ORBCOMM's spectrum of 137 to 150 MHz is at a much lower frequency, and requires a much larger antenna than other networks. Most antennas are basic "whip" antennas that can be several feet long. Smaller, more compact designs are available but with performance trade-offs.

Solutions

Web Applications

ORBCOMM offers a variety of web applications for different industry markets:

Enterprise Applications

ORBCOMM also offers a series of enterprise applications:

Awards and Recognition

See also

References

  1. ORBCOMM.com
  2. ORBCOMM Announces First Quarter 2016 Results
  3. ORBCOMM Announces Third Quarter 2015 Results
  4. ORBCOMM and Morsviazsputnik to Offer IDP Service in Russia
  5. Orbital Sciences Corporation History
  6. Orbital Sciences Corporation History
  7. TRI Acquires License to Sell Orbcomm Messaging Service
  8. Orbcomm Communications Satellite Network
  9. Orbcomm Communications Satellite Network
  10. Class Action Lawsuit Against ORBCOMM
  11. ORBCOMM and SpaceX Reach Deal to Launch Satellite Constellation
  12. ORBCOMM Announces First Global AIS Distribution Agreement
  13. ORBCOMM Announces Launch Window for Second OG2 Mission
  14. ORBCOMM Acquires Euroscan, Europe’s Leading M2M Provider of Refrigerated Transportation Solutions
  15. ORBCOMM Completes Acquisition of SkyWave
  16. , SEC Info
  17. "Russia's Cosmos 3M rocket blasts off with six U.S. satellites". RIA Novosti.
  18. OHB-System milestones
  19. OHB-System missions
  20. Orbcomm failures
  21. http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1361983/000095012309059834/c91352e10vq.htm
  22. http://www.spacenews.com/satellite_telecom/091113-defective-satellites-hobble-orbcomms-ais-business.html
  23. "ORBCOMM AND SPACEX REACH DEAL TO LAUNCH SATELLITE CONSTELLATION". SpaceX. 2009-09-03. Retrieved 2009-09-03.
  24. "ORBCOMM and SpaceX Set Plans to Launch Satellites on Next Falcon 9 Launch". Reuters. 2011-03-14. Retrieved 2011-08-04.
  25. "SpaceX rocket glitch puts satellite in wrong orbit". Reuters. 2012-10-09. Retrieved 2012-10-09.
  26. "SpaceX Engine Failure Claims Experimental Satellite". Wired. 2012-10-15. Retrieved 2012-10-15.
  27. ORBCOMM Launches Commercial Service for First Six OG2 Satellites
  28. ORBCOMM Announces Second Quarter 2015 Results
  29. ORBCOMM Announces Launch Window for Second OG2 Mission
  30. ORBCOMM Announces Launch Window for Second OG2 Mission
  31. ORBCOMM Announces First Quarter 2016 Results
  32. Our Technology Ground Segment
  33. ORBCOMM Cellular M2M Network Coverage
  34. ORBCOMM Satellite AIS
  35. ORBCOMM Wins Two 2016 IoT Evolution Product of the Year Awards
  36. ORBCOMM Receives Smart Grid Product of the Year Award
  37. ORBCOMM Wins 2016 IoT Innovations Award from Connected World
  38. ORBCOMM Wins 2016 Connected World Award
  39. ORBCOMM Wins 2016 MSUA Innovation Award for its OG2 Satellite Modem
  40. ORBCOMM Named Satellite M2M Service Provider of the Year by Compass Intelligence
  41. ORBCOMM Named on Food Logistics Top 100 List
  42. ORBCOMM Named on Connected World’s 2016 CW 100 List
  43. Stevie Award Winners in The 2015 American Business Awards
  44. 2015 IoT Evolution Product of the Year Award Winners Announced
  45. Connected World magazine Announces IoT Innovations Winners
  46. ORBCOMM Wins 2015 MSUA Innovation Award for SkyWave’s IsatData Pro Service
  47. Winners of the 2014 M2M Evolution IoT Excellence Award Announced
  48. Compass Intelligence Announces Winners of the 2015 Mobility Awards, A-List in M2M, Green Technology and Customer & Digital Experience Awards
  49. 2014 M2M Evolution Asset Tracking Award Winners Announced
  50. ORBCOMM Wins M2M Evolution Magazine’s Product of the Year Award
  51. Compass Intelligence Announces Winners of the 2014 Mobility Awards in Wireless, M2M, and Green Technology
  52. ORBCOMM Wins 2013 CTIA E-Tech Award
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