South Korea and Denmark will test a maritime safety and communications system Friday, which they are jointly developing with the intention of making it a global standard.
South Korea's Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries said the test will be conducted on the shores of the country's southeastern city of Busan with Denmark's Maritime Authority.
Seoul has been pursuing an "e-navigation" project since 2014 to match vessel management with ICT, or information and communications technology. It subsequently signed cooperation agreements with Denmark and Sweden to jointly develop an international information sharing system, known as the "maritime cloud," to enable continuous exchanges between ships and safety agencies through satellites, LTE and other means.
Such communication so far has been mostly been through analog media such as facsimiles, texting and voice transmissions, creating communications limits depending on the ship's flag and the communication methods used.
The latest test will be for an LTE-maritime feature to see if a wireless data service is possible up to 100 kilometers from shore. There will also be a test for roaming technology, ministry officials said.
The two sides succeeded in using the maritime cloud to relay real-time navigation safety information to South Korean vessels in December 2016.
Source: http://english.yonhapnews.co.kr/news/2017/11/17/0200000000AEN20171117001500320.html