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Newsletter - Summer 2025
Installation of two new ground stations, container tracking, inclusion in the space industry, and the complementarity between terrestrial and satellite IoT: discover the highlights of our latest news in this summer newsletter.
NEW GROUND STATIONS
South Korea and Djibouti now equipped to strengthen global coverage
In June, the Kinéis GRS (Ground Remote Station) team, supported by our Korean partner CONTEC, commissioned two antennas on Jeju Island, South Korea. Protected by radomes, they complement our stations in Indonesia and Mongolia, bringing the number of equipped sites in Asia to three.
Radomes shield antennas from extreme weather conditions, including high winds, to ensure reliable reception in all circumstances.
In July, an additional ground station was deployed on the ridge of the Arta Geophysical Observatory, 45 km from Djibouti City, with local support from the CERD (Centre d’Études et de Recherche de Djibouti). This is the third African site equipped by Kinéis and is fitted with a radome protected antenna.
An essential component of Kinéis connectivity
With these new sites, the Kinéis network now comprises 19 ground stations strategically distributed across the five continents. They continuously receive data from our satellites — the network was brought into service on 1 June — and forward it to the Kinéis service center, which relays it to users in just a few minutes.
CONTAINERS AND SATELLITE CONNECTIVITY
Real‑time tracking, everywhere without interruption
Every day, some 250 million containers criss cross seas, railways, and roads. Yet thousands of them escape any monitoring. As soon as they leave areas covered by terrestrial networks, visibility vanishes: delays, damage, cargo losses… the supply chain is weakened.
Kinéis ensures continuity
Our satellite connectivity guarantees continuous tracking of containers, even in black spots (no terrestrial coverage). Our partners’ sensors, installed on the containers, measure critical parameters — impacts, temperature, door opening, vibrations — and instantly trigger alerts to the owners.
Impacts
- Unbroken connection: 24/7 tracking with no signal loss.
- Global coverage: detection worldwide, with no local infrastructure required.
- Real‑time critical data: rapid intervention before an incident turns into a problem.
Integrated into the logistics chain, the Kinéis solution brings visibility, responsiveness, and reliability to all modes of transport, restoring control over complex, scattered, and sometimes unpredictable flows — wherever they are.
KINÉIS JOINS THE SPACE WOMEN ALLIANCE
Accelerating diversity and inclusion in the space industry
In the space industry, women account for barely 30% of the workforce and fewer than one in five leadership positions. To help reverse this trend, Kinéis is joining the Space Women Alliance (SWAN).
Created in 2024, SWAN brings together companies, institutions, and associations to make women more visible, support mentoring, and facilitate access to skills across all space‑sector professions.
The alliance acts as a catalyst: it brings together existing initiatives, coordinates good practices, and speaks with a common voice at major international events.
“By joining the Space Women Alliance, Kinéis reaffirms its determination to build a more inclusive and more diverse space industry. Diversity is a major strength for inventing the future of our sector.” — Laurence Delpy, CEO of Kinéis.
This membership reflects a growing drive: to build not only cutting‑edge technologies, but also a more representative and collaborative space ecosystem. As an innovative player with global reach, Kinéis is mobilizing to make diversity a daily practice.
TERRESTRIAL IoT VS. SATELLITE IoT
What combination keeps you connected at all times?
By the end of 2025, International Data Corporation estimates that 41.6 billion connected objects will be deployed worldwide; nearly two‑thirds will serve industry, logistics, or energy.
So how do you connect all these objects — everywhere in the world, all the time?
The real challenge is no longer transmitting data in city centers — 4G/5G, fiber, or LoRa already do that very well — but maintaining the link when a sensor crosses a remote forest, a desert, or the ocean, in other words a white zone.
Terrestrial networks offer high throughput, low latency, and low costs… as long as there is ground infrastructure. Yet only ≈ 15% of the Earth’s surface — the inhabited areas — enjoys such coverage. Beyond that, the signal disappears: logistics tracking is interrupted, preventive maintenance becomes impossible, environmental data is lost.
Satellite networks, whether in LEO, MEO, or GEO, cover the entire planet without ground relays. Throughput remains modest but sufficient to transmit data such as position, temperature, or vibrations. Latency is higher, but still compatiblewith the majority of industrial use cases. And on an isolated worksite, the solution is often more economical than deploying terrestrial antennas.
The hybrid route is the way forward: sensors favor terrestrial connectivity whenever it’s available (for optimal energy use and cost), then switch seamlessly to satellite as soon as the signal drops. The outcome is an unbroken data chain, wherever assets move and whatever the conditions.
Want to dig deeper?
SUMMARY
Ours News
What is a satellite constellation?
Satellite, 5G, and LPWAN: The Winning Combination
Simple Explanation of D2D (Direct-to-Device)
Kinéis and Entente Valabre Deploy an Innovative Space-Based Solution to Support Forest Firefighting Efforts
Terrestrial IoT vs Satellite IoT
kineis at SIAE 2025
About us
Created in 2018, Kinéis is a satellite IoT operator.
© kineis - IoT everywhere - 2023
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