Registered users can unlock up to five pieces of premium content each month.
Where Does the Market Stand with Regard to TETRA? |
NEWS |
TETRA, which stands for Terrestrial Trunked Radio, is a digital radio communication standard primarily used for critical communication and Professional Mobile Radio (PMR) systems. In July 2023, employees of Dutch security firm Midnight Blue discovered important security vulnerabilities affecting all TETRA networks. These vulnerabilities—some of these characterized as being more critical than others—potentially allow an attacker to decrypt communications to inject messages, to deanonymize users, or to set the session key to zero for uplink interception. Seeing that TETRA networks are primarily used for highly critical communication like first responder networks, these vulnerabilities weigh even heavier.
At the same time, however, current users of TETRA networks are reluctant to replace the communication technology altogether. Just in October 2023, the Danish government, for example, decided to extend the nationwide TETRA network for first responder use cases. The reluctance might seem counterintuitive at first. Bearing in mind the use case and the resulting demands toward a new connectivity technology, however, underlines how costly and resource-intensive a reliable upgrade strategy can be.
What Does This Mean for TETRA and 5G? |
IMPACT |
The Danish Government is far from being the only entity that continues to rely on TETRA. It is interesting to see, however, that private cellular connectivity increasingly becomes part of the critical communication discussion as well. Earlier in 2023, NTT announced it would partner with Nippon Airport Radio Services to interconnect the operator’s 5G service with the wireless infrastructure and devices running on TETRA Narita International Airport (in Japan). In addition, ABI Research has knowledge about a few airports and oil & gas companies around the world looking at a similar level of integration. All these developments underline key decision-forming factors that are common to enterprises across different verticals when deciding about deploying new technology.
First, they are almost entirely pain-point focused. As enterprises have a range of heterogenous use cases to address (ranging from highly critical to not at all), different technologies will be best positioned to address them: In many of the applications where high bandwidth rate or low latency is important, 5G has an edge. However, for certain applications like underground mines where voice communication is critical and Line of Sight (LoS) is difficult to obtain, TETRA has an edge.
Second, enterprises place a high emphasis on existing digitization partners and established connectivity technologies. This is particularly important for highly critical use cases, where implementers need to be certain about the functionality of the underlying connectivity technology. Consequently, this applies to all highly critical use cases that TETRA communication currently targets.
What Are the Implications for the Wider Telco Industry? |
RECOMMENDATIONS |
ABI Research expects the transition from TETRA to alternative wireless communication technologies for especially critical applications to take place in several phases, particularly for private enterprise deployments that use TETRA for mission-critical communication within their enterprise premises (i.e., airports, logistics operators, or the military). As these enterprises have invested considerable amounts of capital into TETRA devices, they are—understandably—reluctant to rip and replace the entire infrastructure at once. To drive the adoption of private cellular connectivity, the telco industry will therefore need to develop private cellular solutions that allow enterprises to continue operating their TETRA device, while also enjoying the benefits of private cellular connectivity. First, vendors have reacted to the trend already (HMF’s 5G Smart Box, for example, supports TETRA devices on a private cellular network), but more vendors should embrace this opportunity to make the transition toward private cellular as easy as possible for enterprises. Planning this interoperability will span several different domains.
At the same time, service providers and system integrators will need to make sure they understand both their customer needs and the technology specifications to guide them through this transition period.