Business Day

Alphabet’s Loon launches balloon internet service in Kenya

- Duncan Miriri Nairobi

Alphabet began offering the world’s first commercial highspeed internet using balloons in remote regions of Kenya’s Rift Valley on Wednesday.

The service is run by Loon, a unit of Google’s parent Alphabet, and Telkom Kenya, the East African nation’s third-largest telecoms operator.

“Kenya is the first country to have base stations high up in the sky. Now we will be able to cover the whole country in a short span of time,” said informatio­n minister Joe Mucheru after launching the service.

The technology has been used before, but not commercial­ly. US telecom operators used balloons to connect more than 250,000 people in Puerto Rico after a 2017 hurricane.

The project aims to provide affordable fourth-generation (4G) internet to undercover­ed or uncovered rural communitie­s. It has been more than a decade in the making.

“We are effectivel­y building the next layer of the mobile network around the world. We look like a cell tower 20km in the sky,” said Alastair Westgarth, Loon’s CEO.

The floating base stations have a much wider coverage, about a hundred times the area of a traditiona­l cellphone tower, Westgarth said.

The large, translucen­t balloons are fitted with a solar panel and battery, and float in the upper atmosphere, high above planes and weather.

They are launched from facilities in California and Puerto Rico and controlled via computers in Loon’s flight station in Silicon Valley, using helium and pressure to steer. They also have software equipped with artificial intelligen­ce to navigate flight paths without much human interventi­on.

During the launch of the service in the vast, semiarid county of Baringo in the heart of the Rift Valley, Mucheru placed a video call to President Uhuru Kenyatta.

“Now you will be able to sell your products on the internet. I want to see online sales of honey,” a beaming Kenyatta told residents via the call, referring |to the region’s beekeepers.

Locals had to travel more than 60km to the nearest towns for an internet connection.

Now, farmer Dorcas Kipkeroi said she wants to sell her jars of honey to expatriate Kenyans longing for a taste of home.

“It will help me reach Kenyans who live abroad because communicat­ion has been difficult,” she said.

Westgarth said Loon, which has a deal to roll out the service with Vodacom in Mozambique, has seen increased interest from operators and government­s after the coronaviru­s crisis forced people to rely more heavily on the internet.

“It has really accelerate­d existing discussion­s,” he said.

Details of the commercial agreement between Loon and Telkom Kenya have not been made public.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa