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Airwave (communications network)

Airwave Solutions Ltd.
Industry Telecommunications
Predecessor BT Airwave / O2 Airwave
Founded 2000; 18 years ago (2000)
Headquarters Nova South, 160 Victoria Street, London, SW1E 5LB, United Kingdom
Number of locations
Glasgow, Hemel Hempstead, London, Rugby, Slough, Warrington
Area served
United Kingdom
Products Public safety network
Owner Motorola Solutions
Number of employees
~600
Website www.airwavesolutions.co.uk

Airwave Solutions Ltd. is a British mobile communication company that operates the Airwave network, a mobile communications network used by Great Britain's emergency services. The Airwave network is based on the specialist Terrestrial Trunked Radio specification. Airwave was acquired by Motorola Solutions in February 2016 and now operates as a wholly owned subsidiary.

Airwave was established in 2000 by BT as BT Airwave. BT Airwave along with BT Quadrant secured a Public Private Partnership (PPP) contract worth £2.5bn to supply of Professional Mobile Radio (PMR) communications to the police and other ‘blue light’ services. BT Airwave was part of the BT Wireless division which was spun off from BT Group in 2002 to ultimately become part of O2 and became Airwave O2 Limited, commonly known as O2 Airwave. In April 2007, Airwave was acquired by two Macquarie Group investment funds, Macquarie European Infrastructure Fund II (MEIF II) and Macquarie CPPIB Communications Pty Limited, for $3.8 billion (£1.9 billion). On 3 December 2015 the company was acquired by Motorola Solutions for £817 million (~ US$1000K). Some of the payment was deferred to the following year and Macquarie were supporting the transaction.

On 19 February 2016 Motorola Solutions announced it completed its acquisition of Airwave,

During the 2011 England riots, several police officers experienced "significant difficulties" with the Airwave equipment and were forced to use their own personal mobile phones to co-ordinate strategy during the riots. The Police Federation review speaks of "significant local technical difficulties" and a "significant communications failure," which was quoted in the Guardian newspaper.

However, the National Policing Improvement Agency (NPIA) responded that the network did manage to cover all 16,000 officers and that "[s]ome officers had to wait a few seconds for their calls to get through, but fundamentally, the network proved to be most resilient."

On 27 January 2009, the organizing committee for the 2012 Summer Olympics confirmed that Airwave would provide private radio service for all venues during the Games using its Terrestrial Trunked Radio (TETRA) but with a new and independent communications infrastructure separate from the public safety infrastructure. The PMR network, named Apollo, provided voice communications for over 18,000 staff and volunteers from the London Organising Committee of the Olympic and Paralympic Games (LOCOG) during the 2012 Games.


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