Skylo-certified Creative5 Hestia A2 brings to life first gateway for LoRaWAN
Skylo and Creative5 press release
In today’s interconnected world, “no-signal” zones are still a reality for many remote operations. Whether it is a deep-forest monitoring station, an offshore asset or a rural utility meter, the lack of terrestrial cellular backhaul has long been a barrier to digital transformation.
Skylo has announced that the Creative5 Hestia A2 has achieved Skylo Certification, marking a step for the IoT industry. This hybrid gateway combines the hyper-local efficiency of LoRaWAN with the global reach of Skylo’s 3GPP Release 17 Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN), ensuring your data gets from the edge to the cloud, no matter how remote the location.
Why LoRaWAN and Skylo NTN are a perfect match
LoRaWAN (Long Range Wide Area Network) is a low-power, long-range wireless protocol designed for battery-operated sensors that send small packets of data over long distances. These characteristics make it the natural partner for Skylo’s NTN service:
- Small packet sizes: LoRaWAN is optimised for low-bitrate telemetry, matching Skylo’s focus on efficient, low-data messaging rather than high-bandwidth streaming.
- Massive scalability: A single Hestia A2 gateway can aggregate data from up to 16 LoRaWAN sensor nodes, allowing for high-density sensor deployments in a single remote area.
- Network synergy: Both technologies are designed for “set-it-and-forget-it” reliability in environments where maintenance is difficult and power is scarce.
Solving the “backhaul bottleneck”
The biggest limitation of traditional LoRaWAN is that it requires a backhaul link (usually cellular or Wi-Fi) to send aggregated data to a LoRa Network Server (LNS) in the cloud. When a project site is outside cellular coverage, the network is effectively dark.
This is where Skylo steps in. By using the Hestia A2 as an “NTN – LoRaWAN Gateway Dongle,” organisations can use the Skylo NTN as the backhaul. Instead of searching for a cell signal that isn’t there, the Hestia A2 connects directly to Skylo’s satellite network to route payloads via the CERESHUB Cloud Service.
The benefits: Power, reach and cost-efficiency
When compared to high-bandwidth satellite solutions like Starlink, the Hestia A2 and Skylo NTN offer distinct advantages for industrial IoT:
- Ultra-low power consumption: Starlink terminals require significant power to maintain a high-speed link. In contrast, the Hestia A2 is designed for off-grid, solar or battery operation, using the inherently low power draw of both LoRaWAN and NB- NTN.
- Lower Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): Broadband satellite services can be expensive for simple sensor data. Skylo’s standards-based NTN backhaul is a much lower-cost alternative for low-bitrate telemetry and alerts.
- Ruggedised reliability: With an IP67-rated enclosure, the Hestia A2 is built for the harshest environments, from humid rainforests to arid deserts.
Real-world use cases
The certification of the Hestia A2 unlocks new possibilities across multiple sectors:
- Utilities: Connect smart meters in “dead zones” where public LoRaWAN or cellular networks don’t reach. The Hestia A2 can also serve as a vital backup backhaul if terrestrial networks fail during a disaster.
- Smart agriculture: Deploy soil moisture, micro-climate and irrigation sensors across vast farmlands without worrying about poor cellular reception.
- Smart cities and infrastructure: Manage waste levels, smart lighting and asset tracking in areas where private network deployment was previously impossible due to a lack of backhaul.
- Disaster resilience: Monitor for landslides, floods and wildfires in unpopulated wilderness areas to provide life-saving early warnings.
Skylo certification
Skylo Certification for the Creative5 Hestia A2 signifies more than just a compatibility badge; it is a fundamental shift in how remote IoT operations are connected. This certification guarantees that the hybrid gateway effectively bridges the “connectivity gap,” combining the efficiency of LoRaWAN with the global, always-on coverage of Skylo’s 3GPP Release 17 NTN. The key benefit is the elimination of the traditional LoRaWAN backhaul bottleneck, enabling organisations to deploy high-density sensor networks—aggregating data from up to 16 nodes—in areas outside cellular range, using satellites as the reliable link to the cloud. Furthermore, this certified solution provides distinct advantages for industrial IoT, including ultra-low power consumption for off-grid operation and a lower Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) compared to high-bandwidth satellite alternatives.
Learn more about the product: https://creative5.io/satellite-iot-platform/
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