FCC Unanimously Approves Amazon’s Plan For 3,236 5G Satellites
Amazon is getting serious about space business. Coming shortly after Amazon Web Service’s announcement last month to set up a new business unit dedicated to accelerating innovation in the global aerospace and satellite industry, it has now announced its intention to invest $10 billion for launching a low earth orbit (LEO) satellite constellation called Project Kupier to eliminate Internet dark spots, specifically in the US.
The US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) last week unanimously voted in favor of Amazon’s application to deploy and operate its constellation of 3,236 satellites.
Bezos vs Musk
With this announcement, Jeff Bezos is seen directly taking on Elon Musk in an effort to beam high-speed internet from networks of thousands of satellites in the LEO. Starlink is Musk’s pet project to deliver high speed broadband Internet to locations where access has been unreliable, expensive, or completely unavailable. It has so far sent 500+ satellites in orbit with the latest batch of 60 launched in April this year, and 12,000 planned in the long run. Starlink, which is estimated to cost SpaceX $10 billion, is targeting service in the Northern US and Canada in 2020, rapidly expanding to near global coverage of the populated world by 2021. In February this year, SpaceX President Gwen Shotwell had talked about spinning off Starlink into a separet company and go the IPO route in the coming years.
London-based OneWeb, which was recently acquired by UK government and India’s Bharti Airtel, after it filed for bankruptcy protection in March, also had plans to launch satellite-based Internet services, and had already sent 64 satellites into orbit which it continues to maintain.
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