Waiver Requests
Waiver Requests
Waiver Requests
Pursuant to Section 1.3 of the Commission’s rules, the Commission may waive its rules
for good cause shown.1 “Waiver is appropriate if special circumstances warrant a deviation from
the general rule and such deviation would better serve the public interest than would strict
adherence to the general rule,” including “more effective implementation of overall policy.” 2 In
determining whether waiver is appropriate, the Commission should “take into account
shown below, there is good cause for the Commission to grant a waiver, to the extent necessary,
to the Ka-band Plan and various limitations in the Commission’s Schedule S, and to grant a waiver
As feeder links for its proposed direct-to-cellular system in the Mobile Satellite Service
(“MSS”), SpaceX intends to use the gateway links in the Ka-band spectrum already authorized as
(“Gen2 system”), as well as future E-band links, which SpaceX has requested but remain pending. 4
Some of the Ka-band spectrum is allocated internationally and domestically for FSS and MSS (i.e.,
19.7-20.2 GHz (downlink) and 29.5-30.0 GHz (uplink)).5 Domestically, however, the Ka-band
1
47 C.F.R. § 1.3; see also WAIT Radio v. FCC, 418 F.2d 1153 (D.C. Cir. 1969); Ne. Cellular Tel. Co. v. FCC, 897
F.2d 1164 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
2
GE American Communications, Inc., 16 FCC Rcd. 11038, ¶ 9 (IB 2001) (quoting WAIT Radio, 418 F.2d at 1159).
3
WAIT Radio, 418 F.2d at 1159.
4
See Space Exploration Holdings, LLC, FCC 22-91 (rel. Dec. 1, 2022).
5
See 47 C.F.R. § 2.106.
1
Plan adopted by the Commission does not include this MSS allocation for these bands, 6 and the
remainder of the Ka-band spectrum licensed to SpaceX is allocated to FSS only. Similarly, most
of the E-band spectrum (i.e., 71-74 GHz (downlink) and 81-84 GHz (uplink)) is allocated
internationally and domestically for both FSS and MSS, but a portion does not include an MSS
allocation.7 The Commission recently concluded that feeder links to a similar MSS system are “a
use that can be considered as both FSS and feeder links for the MSS.” 8 Thus, SpaceX’s proposed
use of Ka- and E-band spectrum is consistent with the FSS allocations in those bands.
Accordingly, to the extent necessary, SpaceX requests that the Commission waive Section 2.106
and the Ka-band Plan to allow designation of these bands for use as MSS feeder links.
Waivers of Commission allocations are generally granted “when there is little potential for
interference into any service authorized under the Table of Frequency Allocations and when the
non-conforming operator accepts any interference from authorized services.” 9 Although in this
case the allocation in much of this spectrum is consistent with SpaceX’s proposed use, the same
approach could be used for waiver of the Ka-band Plan—and SpaceX’s request would satisfy its
requirements. Indeed, this is the most rational result given that SpaceX will use these beams to
support both its MSS and FSS services simultaneously. As a practical matter, there will be no
distinction between SpaceX’s FSS and MSS operations in these bands, as they will have the same
characteristics and SpaceX will use directional gateway antennas in both cases. From a technical
6
See Update to Parts 2 and 25 Concerning Non-Geostationary, Fixed-Satellite Service Systems and Related
Matters, 32 FCC Rcd. 7809, Appendix B (2017) (“Ka-band Plan”).
7
See 47 C.F.R. § 2.106.
8
Lynk Global, Inc., DA 22-969, ¶ 19 (IB 2022).
9
The Boeing Company, 16 FCC Rcd. 22645, ¶ 12 & n.48 (IB & OET 2001) (citations omitted) (“Boeing
Authorization”) (quoting Fugro-Chance, Inc., 10 FCC Rcd. 2860, ¶ 2 (IB 1995)); Letter from Jose P. Albuquerque
& Mark Settle to Suzanne Malloy, 30 FCC Rcd. 4841, 4842 (IB & OET 2015).
2
perspective, the use of this spectrum for NGSO MSS operations would not be distinguishable from
its use for NGSO FSS operations and thus there would be no potential for interference.
The Commission has previously granted a similar waiver for the NGSO system operated
by O3b Limited (“O3b”), finding that the waiver would serve the public interest in light of the lack
of distinction between MSS and FSS operations in the band.10 However, the Commission imposed
two conditions with this waiver. First, although there are no equivalent power flux-density
(“EPFD”) limits that apply to NGSO MSS systems, the Commission conditioned O3b’s waiver on
complying with the applicable EPFD limits for FSS operations in the United States in the 19.7-
20.2 GHz and 29.5-30.0 GHz bands, even when these operations are conducted within the MSS. 11
Second, the Commission noted that it has not adopted sharing criteria between NGSO FSS and
NGSO MSS systems in the 19.7-20.2 GHz and 29.5-30.0 GHz bands, and accordingly required
O3b’s NGSO MSS operations in these bands in the United States to be conducted on a non-
interference, non-protected basis with respect to other NGSO FSS operations in these bands. 12 In
addition, O3b’s authorization was “subject to change as the result of future Commission
rulemaking decisions, including any that address technical and/or service rules for MSS or MSS
10
See O3b Limited, 33 FCC Rcd. 5508, ¶¶ 21-22 (2018) (“O3b Authorization”), reconsideration denied, 35 FCC
Rcd. 1631 (2020) (“O3b Recon. Order”).
11
O3b Authorization ¶ 21.
12
Id. ¶¶ 21-22.
13
O3b Recon. Order ¶ 6.
3
2. Waiver of Sections 2.106, 25.112(a)(3), and 25.202(a)(1): Table of Frequency
Allocations
The 1910-1915 MHz and 1990-1995 MHz bands (the “PCS G Block”) currently does not
have a satellite allocation under the U.S. Table of Frequency Allocations. As discussed above, the
Commission will grant waivers to permit non-conforming spectrum uses “when there is little
potential for interference into any service authorized under the [U.S.] Table of Frequency
Allocations and when the non-conforming operator accepts any interference from authorized
services.”14 Under these circumstances, waiving rules that require conformity with existing
frequently grants waivers to provide greater flexibility in the use of a licensee’s already assigned
spectrum, where doing so would not unduly affect other licensees and would improve the efficient
use of spectrum.15
Commission authorized service within the PCS G Block. SpaceX proposes to operate in the PCS
G Block on an unprotected, non-interference basis with respect to other authorized services in the
United States and will operate under terms already agreed to with the spectrum’s sole U.S.
licensee—T-Mobile. SpaceX will also comply with OOBE and boundary field strength limits that
govern the PCS G Block, and which the Commission has already deemed sufficient to protect
other services. Likewise, any other frequency band that SpaceX will seek to use for mobile service
in another country as described in this application will be used under similar conditions.
14
See Boeing Authorization ¶ 12 & n.48.
15
See, e.g., Omnipoint Request for Broadband Declaratory Ruling or Waiver Concerning PCS Emission Limits
Rule Section 24.238, 15 FCC Rcd. 13422, ¶ 1 (WTB 2000) (waiving PCS OOBE limits based on agreements
between operator and adjacent-band licensee). See also State of Florida, Department of Management Services,
Division of Telecommunications, 26 FCC Rcd. 7730, ¶ 6 (PSHSB 2011) (“the public interest will be served by
grant of the waiver because the [proposed system], will provide greater spectrum efficiency—and hence enhanced
communications capability”).
4
SpaceX’s proposed direct-to-cellular system will enhance the utilization of PCS G Block
holdings in a manner fully authorized, and welcomed, by T-Mobile. The Commission, likewise,
has permitted non-conforming uses where the operator agrees to comply with established technical
limits known to protect other authorized services, as SpaceX would do here by complying with the
technical limits in the PCS service rules.16 Accordingly, the Commission should waive
Under Section 25.156 and 25.157 of the Commission’s rules, applications for authority to
launch and operate an NGSO-like system are ordinarily processed under a “modified processing
round” framework, which would use a band splitting mechanism to share spectrum among
competing applicants.17 The primary purpose of the processing round procedure is to prevent one
applicant from unreasonably precluding additional entry by other satellite operators in the
requested frequency band.18 The Commission, however, has waived the processing round
requirement and allowed NGSO systems access to the entire frequency band when doing so will
not preclude additional entry. 19 The Commission should do so here in the PCS G Block. A
16
See, e.g., ContactMEO Communications, LLC, 21 FCC Rcd. 4035, ¶¶ 1, 26-27, 39 (IB 2006) (permitting NGSO
FSS downlinks, from three or four satellites, in a GSO FSS band, conditioned on compliance with Article 22’s
EPFD limit); Northrop Grumman Space & Mission Systems Corporation, 24 FCC Rcd. 2330, ¶¶ 71, 76, 90 (IB
2009) (“Northrop Grumman”) (same); Boeing Authorization ¶¶ 16-17 (permitting aeronautical MSS uplinks in
FSS spectrum based on compliance with protection measures endorsed by Working Party 4A).
17
See 47 C.F.R. §§ 25.156(d)(1), 25.157.
18
See Streamlining Licensing Procedures for Small Satellites, 33 FCC Rcd. 4152, ¶ 41 (2018) (“The Commission
adopted this [processing round] approach for NGSO-like satellite systems because of the possibility of otherwise
unreasonably limiting additional market entry if licenses were granted on a first-come, first-served basis.”); see
also Amendment of the Commission’s Space Station Licensing Rules and Policies, 18 FCC Rcd. 10760, ¶ 25
(2003); Update to Parts 2 and 25 Concerning Non-Geostationary, Fixed-Satellite Service Systems and Related
Matters, 32 FCC Rcd. 7829, ¶ 61 (2017).
19
See, e.g., Iridium Constellation LLC, 31 FCC Rcd. 8675, ¶ 41 (IB & OET 2016) (“Iridium”) (waiving processing
round requirements for an NGSO system because access will not preclude additional entry); O3b Limited, 30 FCC
Rcd. 6115 (IB 2015); Northrop Grumman ¶¶ 23-34; Space Imaging, LLC, 20 FCC Rcd. 11964, ¶ 10 (IB 2005)
(same); Lockheed Martin Corporation, 20 FCC Rcd. 11023, ¶ 15 (IB 2005) (same).
5
processing round would cause needless delay under the circumstances presented by this
First, a processing round is unnecessary because licensing SpaceX would not preclude
additional market entry. T-Mobile has decided to partner exclusively with SpaceX to ensure state-
and conditions. No other satellite applicant would have the right to operate in the frequencies at
Second, the text of the Commission’s rules confirms that processing round procedures do
not apply to this application. Processing rounds allow the Commission to engage in “comparative
consideration with one or more mutually exclusive applications” filed “by the ‘cut-off’ date
the grant of one must “effectively preclude” the grant of the other. 21 Yet for the reasons explained,
processing round were held under these circumstances. Any other application would be facially
defective because the applicant would lack the right to use the frequencies in question and thus
round would be completely inconsistent with the Commission’s secondary market policies. Those
policies allow terrestrial licensees to determine to whom they will grant spectrum use rights based
20
47 C.F.R. § 25.155(b) (emphasis added).
21
Id. § 25.155(a).
6
on the marketplace.22 They do not allow the Commission to second-guess those decisions or
Last, waiving the processing round procedure would avoid costly regulatory delays to the
the service as soon as mid-2023. Given this timeline, announcing a processing round, setting a
“cut-off” date, and engaging in needless bureaucratic review of unmeritorious applications would
require SpaceX and T-Mobile to defer the introduction of the service and its availability to T-
Mobile’s base of more than 100 million subscribers. Because the direct-to-cellular system may
provide the only form of connectivity for mobile users in unserved or underserved locations—and
in some emergencies—such a delay would be uniquely harmful to the public interest. Given these
stakes, the Commission should not go through process just for process’s sake. It should grant
Sections 25.113(a)(3) and (b) provide that, to be acceptable for filing, a space station
application cannot request authority to operate in a frequency band not allocated internationally
for such use.23 Because certain frequency bands discussed in this application are not allocated for
MSS operations internationally, SpaceX requests a waiver of this rule to allow the application to
be accepted for filing and for the proposals discussed therein to be fully evaluated and discussed
on the record.
22
See, e.g., Promoting Efficient Use of Spectrum Through Elimination of Barriers to the Development of Secondary
Markets, 18 FCC Rcd. 20604, ¶ 44 (2003).
23
See 47 C.F.R. §§ 25.113(a)(3) and (b).
7
The Commission has waived this rule in the past when applicants have shown that their
applications are more than “mere ‘placeholders’ for future service, while the applicant pursued
changes to the ITU Radio Regulations necessary to permit that service.” 24 In fact, the Commission
has specifically done so in cases where applicants have sought authorization to provide MSS
service in bands not allocated internationally for MSS.25 While the Commission has disfavored
Table of Frequency Allocations, it has accepted applications that include a viable strategy for
operation, and where the “allocation in these bands do[] not necessarily preclude initiation of
service.”26 This includes cases where the applicant does not propose to operate in a band “pursuant
to an allocation, but will operate on a non-harmful interference basis with respect to any allocated
That is precisely the case here. SpaceX’s operations would occur—if not pursuant to an
international MSS allocation, where available—on a non-interference basis under Article 4.4 of
the ITU Radio Regulations. The specifics of these operations will be addressed in each case via
direct partnership with the appropriate terrestrial carrier and the approval of the local regulator, as
exemplified by SpaceX’s partnership with T-Mobile to operate in the PCS G-Block in the United
States.
Furthermore, given the dramatic benefits of providing mobile service directly to mobile
handsets via satellite, the public interest weighs strongly in favor of such a waiver. The SpaceX
24
In the Matter of Intelsat N. Am., LLC, 22 FCC Rcd. 11989, ¶¶ 8-10 (2007).
25
See Iridium ¶ 19 (waiving section 25.112(a)(3) to consider an application for MSS operations in bands lacking an
international MSS allocation).
26
Id.
27
Orbcomm License Corp., 23 FCC Rcd. 4804, ¶ 20 (2008).
8
service coverage on already licensed frequencies through using hosted payloads on already
authorized satellites as part of its Gen2 system. As a result, the SpaceX direct-to-cellular system
will promote competition for mobile voice, data, and text services without affecting other
Commission licensees and while conserving scarce spectral and orbital resources, all while posing
Accordingly, because of the strong public interest in processing SpaceX’s application, and
because SpaceX can operate internationally in the absence of an ITU allocation, waiver is
appropriate.
transmitting from an earth station.28 In turn, the Commission’s rules define an “earth station” to
mean RF devices on the Earth’s surface that are “intended for communication” with a space station
or other earth stations by a reflecting satellite.29 SpaceX’s direct-to-cellular system would operate
with off-the-shelf mobile devices that are “intended for communication” with terrestrial networks,
not satellites. Such devices would be intended to transmit to a terrestrial base station and would
switch to a direct-to-cellular payload only when a terrestrial base station is out of reach or
unavailable.
To the extent the Commission determines that Sections 25.102(a) and 25.115(a)(1)(i)
require an earth station license for mobile devices that communicate with the direct-to-cellular
payload, SpaceX requests a waiver of this requirement. Commission licenses are intended to
ensure the operation of transmitting devices in a manner consistent with technical rules intended
28
See 47 C.F.R. §§ 25.102(a), 25.115(a)(1)(i).
29
See 47 C.F.R. § 25.103.
9
to prevent harmful interference.30 In this case, other Commission requirements already serve that
technical rules regarding operation in the 1910-1915 MHz uplink band. Users would not need to
modify these authorized devices in any way, including in ways that might potentially affect the
Under these circumstances, separate licensing under Part 25 would be worse than
superfluous—it also would be extremely burdensome on consumers, SpaceX, T-Mobile, and the
Commission alike. If an additional layer of user terminal authorizations were required under Part
25, SpaceX would need to constantly monitor the marketplace for the introduction of new mobile
devices permitted to operate in the PCS G Block. It then would potentially need to seek
communications to accommodate such devices, which Commission staff would need to review
and process. In the interim, SpaceX and T-Mobile would need to take steps to ensure that the new
devices pending licensing do not operate with direct-to-cellular payloads, thereby limiting the
confusion. Accordingly, the Commission should waive Part 25 user terminal licensing
requirements, to the extent it believes those requirements would apply in this circumstance.
As required by the Commission’s rules,31 SpaceX has submitted with this application a
30
See, e.g., Am. Radio Relay League, Inc. v. FCC, 524 F.3d 227, 234-35 (D.C. Cir. 2008); Revision of Part 15 of
the Commission’s Rules Regarding Ultra–Wideband Transmission Systems, 19 FCC Rcd. 24558, ¶¶ 66-71 &
n.179 (2004).
31
See 47 C.F.R. § 25.114(a)(1).
10
However, SpaceX has found that it cannot accurately describe its system in certain respects due to
limitations in Schedule S itself. Below we discuss aspects of the SpaceX direct-to-cellular system
and how the Schedule S was completed under these constraints. To the extent necessary, SpaceX
requests that the Commission waive these aspects of Schedule S in light of these limitations. 32
Because SpaceX does not seek to change the orbital characteristics of the satellites subject
to this modification, SpaceX has included the orbital characteristics of the Gen2 system in this
Accordingly, SpaceX has provided a sample of its information in the electronic version of
Schedule S merely to satisfy the validation requirements of the form, but—for the avoidance of
doubt—does not seek to alter these already-authorized orbital parameters. In addition, because the
Commission granted SpaceX authority to launch and operate up to 7,500 satellites in three orbital
shells at 525 km, 530 km, and 535 km altitudes, SpaceX has included the full complement of
satellites requested in these three shells for purposes of the Schedule S.34 SpaceX will operate
direct-to-cellular payloads on up to 7,500 satellites within the Gen2 system, as initially authorized
by the Commission, while awaiting deferred consideration by the Commission of the additional
satellites originally proposed.35 As a result, not all aspects of the system will be accurately captured
in Schedule S. For example, the “Total Number of Satellites in the Active Constellation” will
32
The Commission has previously granted a similar request where SpaceX implemented a workaround for each of
the limitations it identified in Schedule S. See Space Exploration Holdings, LLC, 34 FCC Rcd. 12307, ¶ 17 (IB
2019).
33
See 47 C.F.R. § 25.117(c).
34
See Gen2 Authorization ¶ 19.
35
Id.; see also Application for Approval of Orbital Deployment and Operating Authority for the SpaceX Gen2
NGSO Satellite System, IBFS File No. SAT-LOA-20200526-00055 (filed May 26, 2020); Amendment, IBFS
File No. SAT-AMD-20210818-00105 (filed, Aug. 18, 2021).
11
reflect the number provided in the sample rather than the total number in the SpaceX direct-to-
cellular system.
Additionally, Section 25.114(c)(4)(v) requires both the minimum and maximum saturation
flux density (“SFD”) values for each space station receive antenna that is connected to
transponders. The concept of SFD only applies to “bent pipe” satellite systems, and thus is not
relevant to the SpaceX direct-to-cell system. However, the Schedule S software does not allow an
entry of “not applicable.” Instead, it requires a numerical entry for SFD, which must be different
for the maximum and minimum values. In order to accommodate this requirement, SpaceX has
entered values of “0” and “-0.1” in Schedule S with respect to these parameters.
12