GSOA calls for universal connectivity goals
November 17, 2025
GSOA has released its new paper, Promoting Synergy Among Communications Services, exploring how the unique strengths of different technologies contribute to broader, more inclusive connectivity when supported by a framework that encourages investment, innovation and fosters diverse networks solutions.
At a time when the ITU’s World Telecommunication Development Conference 25 (WTDC25) is renewing global commitments to connecting the unconnected, GSOA’s paper highlights how the path to universal connectivity depends on all communications technologies, leveraging their unique strengths. Satellites extend reach, resilience, and rapid deployment capabilities, unlocking opportunities where connectivity remains limited.
“Each technology plays a vital role in today’s digital ecosystem,” commented Isabelle Mauro, Director General of GSOA. “Satellites amplify and extend the reach of terrestrial networks. To fully realise this synergy, regulations must reflect how these technologies operate and interact, whilst recognising their own specificities.”
The paper underscores that regulatory frameworks should evolve alongside technological realities. Recognising the specific characteristics of satellite, wireless, and wireline systems is essential to avoid unintended economic, technical, and social challenges which could limit the expansion of essential connectivity solutions.
GSOA calls on policymakers to:
- Recognise the principle of technology neutrality, ensuring policies foster the use of the most suitable solution for the goals.
- Adopt regulatory models that reflect the operational strengths of each network rather than defaulting to uniform rules.
- Support flexibility so networks can complement one another, strengthening connectivity ecosystems and enabling integrated solutions.
- Maintain predictable licensing environments that foster innovation, investment, and the effective deployment of diverse connectivity options.
With thoughtful, fit-for-purpose regulation, governments can accelerate progress towards inclusive universal connectivity goals and advance the shared vision of a world where everyone benefits from, ubiquitous, resilient, meaningful connectivity, concluded GSOA.
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