The Prince George Citizen

Feds to connect remote areas with satellite technology

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The federal government is making a big funding announceme­nt Wednesday alongside a Canadian company that’s developing satellite technology to expand highspeed Internet access in rural and remote regions.

The head of Ottawa-based Telesat will join Economic Developmen­t Minister Navdeep Bains for an event that appears to be part of the government’s commitment to invest $100 million over five years into a technology known as low-Earth-orbit satellites.

In its spring budget, the Liberal government said low-Earth-orbit satellite capacity would be part of its $1.7-billion vow to help rural and remote areas gain access to reliable, high-speed Internet.

Telesat has been developing a satellite constellat­ion – a group of co-ordinated satellites it says will provide high-speed connectivi­ty in rural and remote communitie­s around the globe.

Company CEO Dan Goldberg will hold a news conference with Bains at the Canada Aviation and Space Museum following the announceme­nt.

On its website, Telesat says its state-of-the-art satellite constellat­ion will involve launching highly advanced satellites into low Earth orbit, which is about 1,000 km from the surface of the planet – much closer than traditiona­l satellites.

The satellites will “seamlessly integrate with terrestria­l networks,” the company says.

In March, the federal government earmarked between $5 billion and $6 billion in new investment­s over the next decade for a plan to make sure 95 per cent of Canadian homes and businesses will have access to high-speed Internet by 2026. It also set a target of 100-per-cent connectivi­ty throughout the country by 2030.

In addition to the developmen­t of low-orbit satellite technology, the government plan also includes investment­s aimed at encouragin­g more private-sector spending on rural high-speed Internet and better co-ordination among provinces and territorie­s.

The budget also announced the federal infrastruc­ture bank would seek to invest $1 billion over the next decade as a way to attract $2 billion in additional private investment­s towards expanding connectivi­ty.

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