Amazon to offer broadband access from orbit with 3,236-satellite ‘Project 
Kuiper’ constellation

by Alan Boyle on April 4, 2019  
https://www.geekwire.com/2019/amazon-project-kuiper-broadband-satellite


Amazon is joining the race to provide broadband internet access around the 
globe via thousands of satellites in low Earth orbit, newly uncovered filings 
show.

The effort, code-named Project Kuiper, follows up on last September’s 
mysterious reports that Amazon was planning a “big, audacious space project” 
involving satellites and space-based systems. The Seattle-based company is 
likely to spend billions of dollars on the project, and could conceivably reap 
billions of dollars in revenue once the satellites go into commercial service.

It’ll take years to bring the big, audacious project to fruition, however, and 
Amazon could face fierce competition from SpaceX, OneWeb and other high-profile 
players.

Project Kuiper’s first public step took the form of three sets of filings made 
with the International Telecommunications Union last month by the Federal 
Communications Commission on behalf of Washington, D.C.-based Kuiper Systems 
LLC. The ITU oversees global telecom satellite operations and eventually will 
have to sign off on Kuiper’s constellation.

The filings lay out a plan to put 3,236 satellites in low Earth orbit — 
including 784 satellites at an altitude of 367 miles (590 kilometers); 1,296 
satellites at a height of 379 miles (610 kilometers); and 1,156 satellites in 
391-mile (630-kilometer) orbits.

In response to GeekWire’s inquiries, Amazon confirmed that Kuiper Systems is 
actually one of its projects.

“Project Kuiper is a new initiative to launch a constellation of low Earth 
orbit satellites that will provide low-latency, high-speed broadband 
connectivity to unserved and underserved communities around the world,” an 
Amazon spokesperson said in an emailed statement. “This is a long-term project 
that envisions serving tens of millions of people who lack basic access to 
broadband internet. We look forward to partnering on this initiative with 
companies that share this common vision.”

Amazon said the satellites would provide data coverage for spots on Earth 
ranging in latitude from 56 degrees north to 56 degrees south. About 95 percent 
of the world’s population lives within that wide swath of the planet.

The United Nations estimates that almost 4 billion people around the globe are 
underserved when it comes to internet access, which is becoming increasingly 
important as the world grows more connected.

Some of the world’s best-known companies have been working for years on plans 
to serve that market.

  *  Last year, SpaceX launched the first two prototype satellites for its 
Starlink broadband data constellation, which is projected to grow to more than 
12,000 satellites in low Earth orbit. SpaceX’s facility in Redmond, Wash., is 
playing the lead role in the development effort. SpaceX’s billionaire founder, 
Elon Musk, has said he expects revenue from the Starlink internet service to 
help fund his vision of building a city on Mars.

   * OneWeb had its first six broadband satellites launched in February, and 
plans to put hundreds more in place over the next year or two. Last month, the 
consortium announced a $1.25 billion funding round, led by SoftBank Group, to 
support the ramp-up in operations.

   * Telesat put its first prototype broadband satellite in low Earth orbit 
last year, and plans to have hundreds more launched to provide first-generation 
broadband services in the early 2020s.

   * Facebook, Boeing and Luxembourg-based LeoSat also have laid out plans for 
space-based internet access.

Internet access is already available via satellites in geosynchronous orbit, 
such as the constellations operated by Viasat and Hughes Network Systems, but 
satellites in low Earth orbit are expected to offer advantages in terms of low 
latency and low cost.

Other ventures are staking a middle ground in the satellite broadband race. One 
of those ventures, SES Networks, is due to have four of its O3b satellites 
launched into medium Earth orbit today to boost space-based connectivity.

Amazon didn’t provide a timeline for deployment of Project Kuiper’s satellites 
or for the start of internet service. Nor did it say how much the service might 
cost. The service is likely to be associated with the Amazon brand — as opposed 
to, say, Amazon Web Services. The project’s code name, which pays tribute to 
the late planetary scientist Gerard Kuiper and the solar system’s far-flung, 
icy Kuiper Belt, isn’t likely to end up being the name of the service once it 
goes commercial.

Although the Kuiper satellite coordinates were passed along to the ITU by the 
FCC, the FCC itself has not yet taken regulatory action on the project. 
Amazon’s next step will be to submit filings to the FCC and other regulators 
around the world.

The regulatory process is likely to consider whether Amazon can guarantee that 
its satellites won’t interfere with the thousands of other satellites expected 
to operate in low Earth orbit, and that the satellites will be disposed of 
safely at the end of their operating life without adding to orbital debris.

It’s not clear whether Amazon will manufacture Project Kuiper’s satellites or 
have an outside vendor make them — which leaves lots of room for jokes about 
second-day satellite deliveries. Neither is it clear where Project Kuiper will 
be headquartered — although it’s known that some employees in Seattle are 
working on the project.

Last November, Amazon Web Services launched a cloud computing service known as 
AWS Ground Station to facilitate space-to-ground communications, but satellite 
broadband is likely to require a much more extensive network of earth stations. 
In a recent FCC filing, SpaceX sought approval for up to a million Starlink 
earth stations.

The cost of designing, manufacturing, deploying and operating thousands of 
satellites is sure to run into billions of dollars, but the fact that Amazon’s 
market capitalization is currently close to $900 billion suggests it can cover 
that cost.

It so happens that Amazon’s billionaire founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos, has more 
than a passing interest in space: His Blue Origin space venture is developing 
an orbital-class rocket called New Glenn that’s due for its first launch in 
2021 and could launch bunches of Project Kuiper’s satellites at a time. 
Privately held Blue Origin, which is separate from publicly traded Amazon, 
already holds contracts to send broadband satellites into low Earth orbit for 
OneWeb and Telesat.

An Amazon spokesperson told GeekWire it’s too early to say whether Blue Origin 
will have a lock on the launch contracts, saying, “We will of course look at 
all options.”


GeekWire aerospace and science editor Alan Boyle is an award-winning science 
writer and veteran space reporter. Formerly of NBCNews.com, he is the author of 
"The Case for Pluto: How a Little Planet Made a Big Difference."


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