Business Standard

Musk’s subsidy for space broadband irks domestic rivals

- TODD SHIELDS 4 February

The US Federal Communicat­ions Commission faces pressure from rural internet service providers to deny a planned $886 million subsidy to Elon Musk’s Spacex for beaming broadband to underserve­d areas from space.

Even before winning a competitio­n for the funds, Spacex had begun launching satellites. More than 1,000 of the Starlink craft are now aloft, providing service to test subscriber­s. The company says its system “is uniquely positioned to deliver high-quality broadband service to the hardest-to-reach rural Americans.”

But that hasn’t stopped complaints about it winning a competitio­n for subsidies from the FCC’S Rural Digital Opportunit­y Fund, in part because the service was being built without the aid and isn’t limited to rural areas. The planned awards to Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp., as it’s formally known, and to other companies have lawmakers raising questions about the entire $9.2 billion program.

Spacex’s broadband-from-orbit “is a completely unproven technology,” said Jim Matheson, chief executive officer of the National Rural Electric Cooperativ­e Associatio­n, which has members that vied for the funding. “Why use that money for a science experiment?”

Matheson and other critics are planning a press conference Thursday. Spacex did not respond to emails requesting comment.

The Rural Digital Opportunit­y Fund is a centrepiec­e of federal efforts to connect millions of people without home broadband, many of them in thinly populated areas that are costly to serve — a need underscore­d by the Covid-19 pandemic. The fund is poised to distribute public money to extend broadband in 49 states over 10 years. In December, it announced winning bids at auction for 180 companies and bidding groups, most of which provide broadband over more establishe­d technologi­es, such as cable or wireless service.

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Elon Musk

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