It should be possible to discuss it. I want to emphasize that.
Have you talked to the Fisheries Agency?
Once they leave Taiwan’s territorial waters, it’s not a problem. Are you talking about ship owners who are Taiwanese citizens?
But in the future, we’ll open it up. The medium-orbit satellite is approved and available for the vessel companies to provide Wi-Fi to their crews. But, it’s as we mentioned earlier, it’s expensive.
Let’s put it this way. We just talked about LEO satellite service. It’s not available in Taiwan yet, that’s for sure. We’re using it as proof of concept; the government is first using it for making emergency calls. It’s not a universal service yet.
As for Starlink, we are also trying to get it. If possible, we hope to have 700 hotspots in Taiwan, 700 hotspots for the end points.
We hope to have a chance to do a coverage in Taiwan next year. We’re working hard on the coverage part. We have a plan to provide emergency call for proof of concept. At the end of next year, our minister plans to have 700 hotspots in Taiwan for coverage. ...
But SES, the OneWeb, we’re testing it. We talked about it earlier. We expect to have some tests at the end of the year. Like north of 20-degree north.
Because of coverage issues, Yes, Starlink is technically available, but the low-earth orbit is not open to Taiwan yet.
Let’s have these gentlemen introduce themselves.