Liberia signs deal with Elon Musk's Starlink

Liberia has signed a one-year licensing agreement with tech
billionaire Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service, in a bid to boost
coverage across the poorly connected West African state.
Internet coverage in Liberia currently stands at around 60 per cent, acting chairman of the Liberia Telecommunications Authority (LTA),
Abdullah L. Kamara, told journalists at the signing of the agreement Thursday.
The aim is to push that number towards 100 per cent with the
help of the Starlink deal, he added.
"Every village, town, and even your farm can have
access to the Internet" thanks to the agreement, said Kamara said. The event
was live-streamed on the LTA Facebook page.
Starlink's network of low-Earth orbit satellites can provide
internet to remote locations or areas that normal communications infrastructure
does not reach.
The LTA has issued a one-year provisional licence to
Starlink, which will officially begin operating there at the start of November,
Kamara said.
"The one year is intended for all of us, they,
ourselves, and the marketplace to understand the real impact -- and then after
one year we will issue the continuing licence with any amendment that is
necessary," he added.
The cost for users has not yet been finalised, said Kamara
-- but Starlink will have to work with local internet service providers in
Liberia as part of the deal.
Only 30 per cent of Liberia's 5.3 million people currently
have access to reliable internet services, according to a statement on the LTA
website.
"Starlink's entry into the market could be
transformative, especially for rural areas with limited connectivity," it
added.
In July, Liberia's President Joseph Boakai held a virtual
meeting with Musk, the world's wealthiest man.
They discussed "fostering international collaboration
and leveraging technology for Liberia's development", the LTA said.
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