News
Jul
01
Quickest means of setting up communications in disaster areas unveiled by Babcock
2008 at 12.43
By: Laura Luckett
Babcock, the organisation trusted by the world's broadcasters to deliver content to audiences, has unveiled a new combination of capabilities to help re-establish communications infrastructures inside disaster areas.
The collapse of communications is the crippling side effect of most natural and man-made disasters. Without this, the public cannot find out what to do to survive, find air and keep in touch with the outside world.
Babcock has a history or working with a disaster relief and international peacekeeping organisations to quickly re-establish fixed and mobile communications infrastructures in areas devastated by conflict and extreme weather. It is now launching its latest approach to providing essential communications support to crisis zones, from getting messages to those in need fast, to building a full replacement, communications infrastructure.
The new offering from Babcock involves three distinct phases of activity:
1) Sending messages into the disaster zone
- Babcock will transmit critical messages into disaster regions typically within 24 hours of a disaster striking. It can do this over short wave radio and reach the majority of the globe.
2) Setting up a communication centre within the disaster zone
- Babcock will provide on-the-ground production, communications and localised broadcasting facilities as soon as transportation into the area is possible. This can be through an easily portable production and transmission unit in a suitcase or a more robust flight-case option that can be used for longer periods of time. For mobile solutions Babcock develops customised vehicles that let users produce, communicate and transmit programming across any area where they can drive.
3) Building a new permanent communications infrastructure
- Babcock will expertly design, build and operate a permanent new communications infrastructure once the crisis has abated.
Babcock can provide the right combination of production, communications, transmission and power facilities to meet the individual needs of the crisis. It has also invested £2.4 million in a new Media Management Centre that will offer around the clock support to customers as they look to re-establish communications in disaster areas.
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