

 
 INSIGHTi 
 
National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, 
and Medicine Report on Ligado Networks and 
the Interference Debate  
Updated December 11, 2023 
On April 19, 2020, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved an application by Ligado 
Networks, a U.S. telecommunications company, to deploy a terrestrial network within the United States 
using segments of L-Band spectrum—spectrum typically used for satellite services. Federal agencies such 
as the Departments of Defense (DOD), Homeland Security, and Transportation and several Members of 
the House and Senate Armed Services committees objected to the decision. They contend “loud” signals 
from Ligado’s terrestrial transmitters will overpower the reception of “soft” signals from Global 
Positioning System (GPS) satellites and other mobile satellite services (MSS), potentially impacting DOD 
operations near Ligado transmitters, as discussed during a May 2020 Senate Armed Services Committee 
hearing. Members of Congress, GPS experts, GPS device manufacturers, the aviation industry, weather 
organizations opposed the decision, citing interference concerns. The FCC said its decision, which 
requires Ligado to mitigate interference, would enhance U.S. leadership in advanced wireless services and 
was supported by Members of Congress and Trump Administration officials.  
Petitions for Stay and Reconsideration 
On May 22, 2020, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), an agency 
in the Department of Commerce, filed one petition with the FCC, an independent regulatory agency, on 
behalf of the executive branch to stay the order and another petition to reconsider the decision. On 
January 19, 2021, the FCC declined to stay the order. Eight other entities filed petitions for 
reconsideration, all of which are pending. 
Congress Mandates Review of FCC Decision 
In the William M. (Mac) Thornberry National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (P.L. 116-
283), enacted January 1, 2021, Congress required DOD to enter into an agreement with the National 
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) for an independent technical review of the 
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FCC’s decision and recommendations on which interference assessment method most effectively 
mitigates DOD risks.  
NASEM Report 
In its September 9, 2022, report, NASEM found “most commercially produced general navigation, 
timing, cellular, or certified aviation GPS receivers will not experience significant harmful interference 
from Ligado emissions,” but that “some high-precision receivers, used for applications such as farming, 
geodesy, and surveying and sold before about 2012, can be vulnerable to significant harmful 
interference.” It also found certain Iridium Communications Inc. receivers used by DOD and others 
would experience harmful interference, under certain conditions.  
In P.L. 116-283, Congress directed NASEM to compare two approaches the FCC considered in evaluating 
interference—one based on a signal-to-noise interference protection criterion and the other based on 
device-by-device measurement of GPS position error—to determine if they effectively mitigate 
interference risk. NASEM found neither approach effective. It concluded that interference evaluation is 
complex, and varies by device type and use. It noted multiple non-quantifiable definitions of harmful 
interference and lack of consensus about which definitions to use. 
According to NASEM, neither approach provides an “engineerable, predictable standard that new entrants 
can readily use to evaluate impact.” In the absence of definitive receiver standards, “a new applicant for 
emissions in an adjacent channel will have great difficulty in determining the emitter power levels and 
stand-off distances that will be guaranteed not to cause Harmful Interference to [existing] GPS receivers. 
A GPS receiver designer will be unable to design a receiver that will be guaranteed to tolerate unknown 
potential future allowed levels of adjacent-band power.” NASEM found “all GPS receiver manufacturers 
could field new designs that could coexist with the authorized Ligado signals and achieve good 
performance even if their existing designs cannot.” It recommended the FCC work with industry to 
develop receiver standards and with NTIA to resolve spectrum issues, conduct joint studies and testing, 
define receiver performance standards, and set adoption timelines.  
Responses to NASEM Report  
DOD, NTIA, and Ligado released separate statements indicating the report validated their positions. 
DOD stated that NASEM’s findings supported its testing approach, confirmed Ligado emissions could 
harmfully interfere with DOD’s high-precision GPS receivers and MSS, and concluded that FCC 
mitigation requirements were “impractical, cost prohibitive, and possibly ineffective.” The NTIA issued a 
similar statement and urged the FCC to reconsider its decision. 
Ligado Networks noted that NASEM found most GPS receivers will not experience harmful interference, 
stating “a small percentage of very old and poorly designed GPS devices may require upgrading,” and 
that it is ready to assist agencies with outdated devices. In a September 12, 2022, letter to the FCC, 
Ligado announced it would not move forward with its trial deployment and would work with NTIA on the 
issue. 
On April 24, 2023, citing the NASEM report, over 90 organizations signed and sent a letter to Congress 
urging it to work with the FCC to stay the Order. On October 12, 2023, Ligado filed a complaint in the 
U.S. Court of Federal Claims, stating the U.S. government and agencies have prevented Ligado from 
using its licensed spectrum, amounting to an unlawful taking of its licensed spectrum. 
  
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Considerations for Congress 
As demand for mobile data increases, spectrum disputes increase as well. Some Members have called for 
increased interagency coordination on spectrum decisions and voiced support for agency-driven efforts 
such as the FCC’s and NTIA’s recent Spectrum Coordination Initiative. Others proposed strengthening 
interagency coordination through legislatio (H.R. 3565, H.R. 1341, H.R. 4513).  
Congress in the past has supported initiatives to study receiver performance, which could lead to more 
efficient spectrum use. While the FCC typically focuses its rules on transmitters, it acknowledges receiver 
performance also affects spectrum use. Thus, in April 2022, the FCC issued a Notice of Inquiry 
examining receiver performance for nonfederal uses. Some industry organizations oppose fixed federal 
standards, saying flexibility supports innovation. NTIA submitted comments describing its efforts to 
improve federal receiver performance. While adoption of receiver standards could expand spectrum use, 
standards may require entities, including federal agencies, to replace older receivers, which may impose 
costs. On April 20, 2023, the FCC adopted a Policy Statement on receiver performance that recognized 
the potential for interference in a crowded spectrum environment, shared responsibilities for transmitters 
and receivers to help mitigate interference, and called for “data-driven regulatory approaches to promote 
coexistence.” 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Jill C. Gallagher 
   
Analyst in Telecommunications Policy 
 
 
 
 
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