ETSI Improves the Future of Emergency Communications ETSI enables intercontinental testing for next-generation emergency communicationsETSI has
successfully completed its international emergency communications
interoperability testing event. 285 test pairings, with 87% demonstrating
interoperability, were run from 22 February to 5 March 2021, both in Europe and
across the Atlantic to assess the compatibility of products for
mission-critical public safety services. This remote event was a cooperation
between ETSI, EENA, the European Emergency Number Association and for the first
time NENA, the 9-1-1 Association. Vendors of emergency
communication equipment connected to test Next Generation 112 and NG9-1-1
technologies, responding to the increasing requirements and demands of
content-rich, IP-based emergency calling. Stakeholders included NGCS vendors,
Forest Guide developers, user agents, mobile operators and call handling
vendors. Government bodies, policy makers and local authorities also joined in to
discuss implementation in their countries. Participants tested components of
the emergency communication chain such as location and location-based call
routing, audio, video, real-time text, policy-based routing and core services
based on ETSI TS 103 479, developed by the ETSI EMTEL Special
Committee. “These first-ever international NG9-1-1 and NG112
tests allow us to evaluate our consensus-based standards internationally,” highlighted NENA President Gary Bell, ENP. “This enables public
safety to not only interoperate internationally, but also to expand the field
of technical solutions available to organizations in the United States and
Europe.” Source: ETSI media announcement |