Access to the examination room is only granted upon presentation of your ID card.
Since the entry into force of Brexit on 1 January 2021, the European rules on roaming no longer apply in the United Kingdom.
This means that when you make a call, send text messages or surf the Internet from the United Kingdom (to an EU country), consumer prices may be higher than in an EU country given that operators are allowed to apply a roaming surcharge.
For now, however, certain operators are still applying the “Roam-like-at-home” regime in the United Kingdom on a voluntary basis.
We advise you to check with your operator to find out whether it still applies the "Roam-like-at-home” regime in that country.
This information is described in the radio amateur frequency plan table which is based on a decision of the BIPT.
You must send us your station authorisation back so that we can deactivate it and so that your vessel can be deleted from international databases.
Please send it to:
BIPT Maritime Department Boulevard du Roi Albert II 32 box 10 1000 Brussels
It will take a few more years before 5G is fully deployed, both at network and service levels. On the one hand, the traditional mobile operators (Proximus, Orange, Telenet) are still in the process of further developing 5G and the transition towards 5G SA, while the fourth operator DIGI is setting up its own radio access network.
6G is the logical successor to 5G, but is not expected before 2030. In general, 6G will be even more performant in terms of speeds, latency, terminal densities and security. In terms of available frequency, frequencies in the 470-692 MHz band, the upper part of the 6 GHz band, and frequencies above 40 GHz are considered at international level.
The measures needed to enable direct 5G communication between ordinary terminal devices and/or smartphones and satellite networks are currently being explored. This will be interesting in areas where there is no terrestrial 5G coverage.