Supported by our Space for 5G/6G & Sustainable Connectivity programme, 5G-EMERGE – which is led by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) – represents an effort to rethink media distribution in an era of ubiquitous connectivity.
The project aims to do so by integrating satellite and terrestrial 5G/6G infrastructures into a seamless media-delivery ecosystem, based on open standards. The upshot will be scalable, high-quality media distribution to a variety of endpoints: homes, vehicles, network edges, and even direct-to-device.
By fusing satellite distribution, edge computing, and 5G infrastructure, it tackles both the technological and economic challenges of reaching users everywhere, with high quality and resilience. As use-cases evolve from homes and vehicles to devices and interactive services, the project charts a course for how Europe – and potentially beyond – will deliver content and connectivity in the next decade.
The success of 5G-EMERGE could catalyse broader adoption of integrated space-terrestrial networks, helping to realise the vision of seamless global connectivity.
Consortium and industrial collaboration
The 5G-EMERGE project brings together a diverse consortium of key players from across Europe, combining expertise from the space, telecommunications, and media sectors under the coordination of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU).
5G-EMERGE is a broad consortium involving dozens of companies across Europe. In Phase 1 25 organisations participated, while Phase 2 expanded to 34 companies, and across eight Member States including Switzerland, Luxembourg, Italy, Sweden, Norway, Netherlands, the United Kingdom and Finland.
Features of 5G-EMERGE
The architecture envisaged for 5G-EMERGE includes several layers and key elements:
A satellite backhaul layer
Satellites transmit content (popular media streams) to teleports, home gateways or edge nodes.Edge nodes
These may reside in 5G base stations, micro-data centres, home gateways, vehicles etc. They host caching, content delivery logic, service orchestration, and the interface to end-users.Service provisioning layer / orchestration
Because the system is multi-tenant and must support distributed edges and satellite links, the project investigates the interfaces, service discovery, orchestration, caching optimisation, QoS/security layers.Integration with standards
The work leans heavily on 3GPP standards for terrestrial 5G/6G, as well as satellite standards. Phase 2 explores New Radio-Non-Terrestrial Network (NR-NTN), direct satellite-to-device connectivity, multicast/broadcast over 5G.Open IP-based system
The ecosystem uses native-IP protocols to enable flexibility and interoperability.Use cases of 5G-EMERGE
The core value proposition of 5G-EMERGE is that satellite distribution can efficiently deliver popular content (live events, on-demand) to many users simultaneously, while terrestrial edges (including 5G base stations, home gateways, localized caches) handle the “last-mile” delivery and interactive functions.