Facebook Plans to Beam Internet to Africa from Space

Facebook plans ahead to beam space internet to africa, in a bid to increase internet in remote regions of the globe.

European satellite operator Eutelsat Communications and Facebook said they are working jointly to deliver satellite broadband Internet to sub-Saharan Africa. Financial terms of the agreement were kept secret.

The firms revealed they have reached a multi-year agreement with satellite communication firm Spacecom to use the entire broadband payload of the AMOS-6 satellite due to come on stream in the second half of next year and provide coverage for large swathes of sub-Saharan Africa, after identifying "pent-up demand for connectivity". The free content ad network and French satellite operator plan to build a system made up of sat capacity, gateways and terminals.

Facebook said it wanted to help to bring broadband access to "unconnected populations" as part of the firm's Internet.org initiative. Two years ago Facebook launched Internet.org, an initiative to accelerate connectivity in poorly covered regions and unveiled plans to work with partners in Africa to improve both satellite and terrestrial capacity for rural areas.

“Facebook’s mission is to connect the world, and we believe that satellites will play an important role in addressing the significant barriers that exist in connecting the people of Africa”, Chris Daniels, Internet.org vice president, said in a statement. “We are looking forward to partnering with Eutelsat on this project," Daniels added.

Eutelsat chairman and CEO, Michel de Rosen, said: “We are excited by this opportunity to accelerate the deployment of our broadband strategy and to partner with Facebook on a new initiative to provide Internet access services in Africa.”

"Eutelsat’s strong track record in operating High Throughput Satellite systems will ensure that we can deliver accessible and robust Internet solutions that get more users online and part of the Information Society.”

Eutelsat said in a statement the project would offer access "using affordable, off-the-shelf" hardware, sharing capacity with Facebook in regions often lacking access to reliable fixed and mobile terrestrial networks.

"Satellite networks are well suited to economically connecting people in low- to medium-density population areas," Eutelsat added.

The capacity will enable Eutelsat to step up its broadband activity in sub-Saharan Africa that was initiated using Ku-band satellites to serve professional users.

Eutelsat is establishing a new company based in London that will steer its African broadband vision and business. The company will be led by Laurent Grimaldi, founder and former CEO of Tiscali International Network, and will focus on serving premium consumer and professional segments.

The company claimed that it would "deliver accessible and robust internet solutions" to more people in Sub-Saharan Africa. Eutelsat said, “The capacity is optimised for community and Direct-to-User internet access using affordable, off-the-shelf customer equipment. “

The deal comes a few months after the software development company abandoned its multi-billion dollar plan to beam Internet.org via satellite to less-connected parts of the world.

License: You have permission to republish this article in any format, even commercially, but you must keep all links intact. Attribution required.