Starlink: Rwanda to pilot Elon Musk’s satellite internet service in public schools
Starlink, the
satellite internet firm owned by tech titan
Elon Musk, is entering Rwanda, just weeks after it began rolling out in
Nigeria.
The internet provider is lined up for launch
in a number of African states such as Kenya and Mozambique to take on local
telcos with its promise of delivering speeds of over 150Mbps.
Following an announcement by the Rwanda Space
Agency (RSA) in early February that it had licensed Starlink to operate in the
country, the Rwandan government has said public schools will be given
top priority during the roll-out.
According to the country’s Minister
of ICT and Innovation, Paula Ingabire, the initial plan is to pilot it
in at least 500 schools by February 22.
“Among the services we are undertaking, which
we agreed upon with Starlink last year (2022), we are going to start with at
least 500 schools so that at least such internet will be tested, and
distributed there,” Rwandan newspaper The New Times on Monday quoted
Ingabire as telling lawmakers during a plenary session of the Chamber of
Deputies.
Per Starlink’s operating licence, the internet
broadband system’s operations were due to begin in Rwanda in the first quarter
of 2023, by the end of March.
The company’s introduction comes at a time local
internet providers in Africa are still struggling to grow 5G coverage, which delivers
speeds of up to 100Mbps.
In Kenya for instance, telco giant Safaricom started
rolling out 5G last year but the coverage is still scarce and few people
have 5G routers.
In Rwanda’s case, the ICT minister says the capacity
offered by Starlink will be affordable for larger entities such as health
facilities, marketplaces, schools or public institutions.
Starlink’s kit comes in three trim levels;
Standard for “residential users and everyday internet applications” like
streaming, video calls and online gaming.
The second option, which Rwanda might opt for
its schools, is the High-Performance version, which targets “power user,
business, and enterprise applications”.
On its website, Starlink says this kit allows
better speeds at high temperatures, can connect to more satellites, and is more
resilient to extreme environments.
The most sophisticated of them all, the Flat
High-Performance kit, targets “mobility applications and challenging
environments”.
A Starlink link costs Ksh.74,216 ($599), and interested
buyers can already pre-order and deposit a fully refundable deposit of
Ksh.12,260 ($99) to reserve a kit.
The monthly cost of the standard kit has been $110 for
customers in the United States, which is about Ksh.14,000.
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