OneWeb Is Putting LEO Satellite Internet on Trains - and Revenue Is Up 60%
TL;DR
Eutelsat's OneWeb LEO constellation is expanding into the global rail market, with Kymeta and Hughes Network Systems developing dedicated ruggedized terminals for trains. The service is already running on rail networks across Africa, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and North America. Eutelsat CEO Fallacher reported OneWeb revenues up 60% in the first half of 2026. The UK government is also moving to make deeper use of the constellation.
Key Takeaway
Eutelsat announced on March 24, 2026 that its OneWeb LEO constellation is being rolled out across the global rail market, with Kymeta and Hughes Network Systems developing certified ruggedized terminals specifically for trains. The service is already operating on rail networks across five continents - handling both passenger Wi-Fi and critical operational systems like train control, signalling, and safety monitoring. OneWeb revenues are up 60% year-on-year as of early 2026, and the UK government - a Eutelsat shareholder since the 2020 rescue of the original OneWeb - is signaling it wants to deepen use of the network for critical national infrastructure.
Why Rail Is One of the Hardest Connectivity Problems
Trains seem like a simple connectivity challenge: vehicles moving along fixed, known routes. In practice, they are among the most technically demanding satellite internet use cases.
Fast-moving metal vehicles create rapid Doppler shifts in satellite signals and require antennas that track satellites at high angular rates. Tunnels create frequent signal blackouts. The metal bodywork of carriages blocks signals from below and to the sides. Rail regulatory standards require terminals to meet shock, vibration, and weatherproofing standards far beyond what consumer dishes accommodate. And unlike maritime vessels, which move at 10-25 knots, high-speed rail operates at 200-350 km/h, requiring faster beam-switching between satellites.
The New Terminal Partners
Eutelsat announced two hardware partners developing dedicated OneWeb rail terminals:
Kymetaโs Kestrel u5 is a flat-panel antenna designed for transportation applications. The u5 meets IP69K (high-pressure jet wash) and IP68 (submersion) weathering ratings - the standards required for exterior mounting on rolling stock. Kymetaโs electronically-steered aperture technology eliminates the mechanical gimbals and moving parts that traditional satellite dishes require, making it more resilient to rail vibration.
Hughes Network Systems - a subsidiary of EchoStar and one of the largest satellite internet operators globally - is developing a Hughes-branded terminal for OneWebโs rail customers. Hughes brings a large enterprise sales network and existing relationships with rail operators, particularly in North America and Latin America.
OneWeb Rail Connectivity - March 2026
Continents with Rail Service
Africa, Asia, Middle East, Europe, N. America
Revenue Growth
OneWeb H1 2026 vs H1 2025
OneWeb Satellites in Orbit
LEO constellation at ~1,200 km
What OneWeb Is Already Carrying on Rail
The March 24 announcement confirmed that OneWeb LEO is already deployed across rail networks in Africa, Central Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and North America. Use cases are running across two categories:
Passenger connectivity - Wi-Fi for travellers on long-distance and intercity trains. Many rail operators have struggled to provide reliable Wi-Fi because existing GEO satellite solutions are inadequate and mobile (4G/5G) coverage along rail corridors is patchy, particularly in rural and remote regions.
Operational connectivity - This is where the rail use case becomes genuinely critical rather than merely convenient. Operational systems include:
- Train control and signalling (position reporting, speed management)
- SCADA systems (supervisory control and data acquisition for infrastructure monitoring)
- Safety monitoring (onboard diagnostics, incident reporting)
- Video surveillance feeds
- Driver and crew communications
These applications require reliable, low-latency links 24/7. A GEO satelliteโs 600ms latency and vulnerability to weather fade makes it unsuitable for systems where failure has safety consequences. OneWebโs LEO architecture - combined with the ground redundancy of a 654-satellite constellation - provides a more robust solution.
Eutelsatโs Business Situation: Revenue Up, Debt Pressure Persisting
Eutelsat CEO Eva Berneke (now succeeded by Jean-Yves Fallacher following a management transition in late 2025) reported in a March 19 interview with Via Satellite that OneWeb revenues grew approximately 60% in the first half of 2026 compared to the prior year. The growth is driven by enterprise and government contracts - exactly the kind of rail and critical infrastructure deals announced on March 24.
The CEO also confirmed Eutelsat is planning to launch 440 replacement Gen 1 satellites starting later in 2026. The current OneWeb constellation, deployed mostly in 2022-2023, has limited remaining design life on the original satellites. The 440-satellite replacement batch serves as a bridge to IRIS2 - the European Unionโs sovereign LEO constellation that Eutelsat will help operate - which is targeted for launch starting in 2029-2030.
The UK Government Angle
The UK government holds equity in Eutelsat (inherited from its 2020 investment in the original OneWeb to prevent bankruptcy) and has been evaluating how to make deeper operational use of the constellation for UK purposes. ISPreview UK reported in late March 2026 that government officials are seeking expanded use of OneWeb for critical national infrastructure resilience.
Specific applications under discussion reportedly include emergency services connectivity, rural broadband backhaul, and sovereign communications resilience - the ability for the UK government to maintain communications links that do not depend on US-controlled infrastructure.
OneWeb Active Satellites
654 / 654
100.0%
Gen 1 Replacement Batch
0 / 440
0.0%
IRIS2 (Target 2029-30)
0 / 290
0.0%
The Broader Rail Market Opportunity
Global rail is a large, underserved connectivity market. There are approximately 1.4 million kilometers of rail track worldwide, serving passenger and freight services in nearly every country. The total addressable market for rail connectivity - operational and passenger systems combined - is estimated in the billions of dollars annually.
The incumbents in rail connectivity have mostly been 4G/5G mobile operators using trackside base stations, which cover only a fraction of rural and international routes. Satellite has historically been the fallback for remote sections, but GEO satelliteโs latency and reliability issues made it inadequate for operational systems.
LEO satellite changes the equation. At sub-50ms latency with global coverage, it can replace cellular as the primary backbone for rail operational connectivity in remote regions, and provide coverage in places where building mobile infrastructure is economically unviable.
Connectivity Options for Remote Rail Routes
Timeline
Timeline
UK government and others rescue original OneWeb from bankruptcy; OneWeb completes initial 648-satellite planned constellation (654 operational)
Eutelsat acquires OneWeb; merges it with GEO fleet to create multi-orbit operator
First OneWeb rail deployments confirmed across Africa and Central Asia routes
CEO Fallacher confirms 60% OneWeb revenue growth in H1 2026 vs H1 2025
Eutelsat announces Kymeta Kestrel u5 and Hughes terminals for certified rail deployments
UK government signals intent to expand OneWeb use for critical national infrastructure
Launch of 440 Gen 1 replacement satellites begins
IRIS2 EU sovereign constellation begins launch; Eutelsat operates alongside OneWeb
Bottom Line
Rail is the sleeper use case for LEO satellite internet. It is not glamorous, but it represents a market where the technical limitations of previous satellite generations created genuine unmet demand - and where LEOโs latency profile and global coverage change what is possible.
Eutelsatโs 60% revenue growth signal and the UK governmentโs stated interest suggest OneWeb is finding traction in the enterprise and government market even as consumer satellite broadband remains dominated by Starlink. The partnership with Kymeta and Hughes brings serious hardware credentials to the rail vertical - both companies have existing rail deployment experience that Eutelsatโs satellite team alone could not replicate.
The harder question is whether OneWebโs growth can outpace Eutelsatโs debt obligations and the impending need to replace an aging satellite fleet. The rail expansion is a positive indicator, but the financial pressure on the parent company remains a background risk for any enterprise customer evaluating a long-term OneWeb commitment.
Sources
- TechAfrica News - Eutelsat Expands OneWeb LEO Adoption in Global Rail Connectivity Market - accessed 2026-03-28
- Eutelsat Official Press Release - Eutelsat Expands LEO Connectivity for Global Rail Market - accessed 2026-03-28
- Via Satellite - Eutelsat CEO Fallacher Talks OneWeb Gen 2, Global Competition, and Sovereign Demand - accessed 2026-03-28
- ISPreview UK - UK Government Seeks to Do More with OneWeb's Broadband Satellites - accessed 2026-03-28
- Runway Girl Network - Eutelsat LEO Connectivity for Rail Market - accessed 2026-03-28
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