San Antonio Express-News

Amazon seeks to launch more internet satellites

- By Todd Shields

Amazon.com Inc.'s Kuiper Systems LLC asked U.S. regulators for permission to launch another 4,538 satellites that would bolster its constellat­ion as it competes with Elon Musk's Spacex for broadband-from-space customers.

The additions would bring Kuiper's constellat­ion to 7,774 satellites, the company said in a filing Thursday with the Federal Communicat­ions Commission.

The companies are joining a rush to offer internet service from orbits near the Earth, spurred in a part by decreasing launch costs. Low orbits offer minimal lag time for data to bounce between a user on the ground and the spacecraft.

Kuiper's request was among nine applicatio­ns, submitted under an FCC deadline, that requested authorizat­ion for a total of more than 35,000 spacecraft. That's more than seven times the number aloft today. Those figures don't include nearly 30,000 additional satellites proposed by segment leader Spacex, which already has launched more than 1,700 of its Starlink spacecraft.

Companies filing for FCC approval Thursday included Boeing

Co., which proposed another 5,789 communicat­ions satellites after winning permission on Nov. 3 for 147 satellites. The additional spacecraft will boost capacity to serve businesses and government­s, Boeing said in its applicatio­n.

Astra Space Inc. asked permission for 13,620 satellites for what it described as “communicat­ions services, environmen­tal and natural resource applicatio­ns, and national security missions.”

Spokespers­ons for Boeing and Astra didn't immediatel­y return emails seeking comment, and an Amazon spokesman didn't supply a comment when asked.

Kuiper and Musk's Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp. each have applicatio­ns before the FCC for satellite fleets in lowearth orbit. The companies have been sparring in recent months, with Amazon contending that Spacex hasn't met regulatory requiremen­ts. Spacex dismissed the criticism as irrelevant.

Spacex has emerged as a space leader, having launched at least 1,700 of its Starlink broadband satellites with plans for thousands more. Amazon.com earlier won FCC approval for 3,236 satellites, and says it will launch two prototypes late next year.

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