Amazon to spend $11bn on satellite firm in growing Starlink rivalry
Amazon to spend $11bn on satellite firm in growing Starlink rivalry12 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleKali HaysTechnology reporterReutersA rocket carrying Amazon satellites takes off from Cape Canaveral, Florida, in April 2025Amazon is aiming to build-up its satellite business to offer internet and mobile phone services by spending $11.57bn (£8.5bn) on an acquisition of Globalstar.The deal, announced Tuesday, will allow Amazon to get thousands of satellites into low-earth orbit through the Amazon Leo project the company has been working on for several years.Amazon said the Globalstar takeover fits its "long-term vision for space-based connectivity" and that it will deploy a "next generation" satellite system in 2028.By doing so, Amazon will be in closer competition with Starlink, an increasingly popular satellite-based internet and phone service company launched by Elon Musk in 2019.Starlink has a significant head-start on Amazon's Leo, which currently only has around 200 satellites in orbit.Musk's company, which is private, says it already has more than 10,000 active satellites offering internet and mobile phone service to more than 10 million paying customers.Starlink is a subsidiary of SpaceX and is likely a significant source of revenue for that company, potentially bringing in between $500m and $1.2bn from individual user fees alone.SpaceX is preparing to become a publicly listed company this year, with a valuation expected to exceed $1 trillion.Even with Globalstar's currently active constellation of about 50 satellites, Amazon Leo will need to significantly ramp up production to meet its goal of thousands of active satellites in orbit by 2028.Amazon chief executive Andy Jassy said last week in an annual letter to shareholders that Leo already has commitments from Delta Airlines, JetBlue, AT&T, Vodafone, DIRECTV Latin America, Australia's National Broadband Network, and NASA to use Leo satellites for th...المصدر: BBC Business | Source: BBC Business
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