03.24.26

Jay Monroe finally wins his bet on Globalstar…

Posted in Amazon, AST SpaceMobile, D2D, Globalstar, Lynk, Operators, Services, SpaceX, Spectrum, ViaSat at 5:43 pm by timfarrar

After more than 20 years, it looks like Jay Monroe has finally achieved his goal of selling Globalstar at a profit. In the coming days, I understand that the sale process initiated back in October will reach its conclusion, and Globalstar will be sold at something close to Jay’s asking price of $10B. And as I promised Jay in Paris last September, I’ll owe him an apology for ever doubting that he would be able to make money on his Globalstar investment.

Rumors have been swirling all week here at the satellite conference in Washington DC and many people have guessed that the winning bidder would be Amazon. That seemed to be the most likely outcome back in January. However, I think that Jay took Amazon’s offer to SpaceX and they probably decided to beat it, in order to further cement Starlink’s dominance of the satellite industry. Amazon already faces severe competitive pressure from Starlink in the broadband market, and a Starlink purchase of Globalstar would block another opportunity for Amazon to broaden its appeal and match Starlink’s D2D offer.

Buying yet more spectrum might not be seen as the wisest course of action for SpaceX, if some international regulators decide that because Starlink controls Globalstar’s MSS spectrum there is no need to grant Starlink additional rights in the 2GHz MSS spectrum acquired from EchoStar. But Brendan Carr’s threats that he will block European satellite operators from the US market if the EU withdraws Starlink’s spectrum rights should carry the day in the near term.

In particular, a two year extension is likely to be granted for the current EU 2GHz spectrum licenses (which is conveniently beyond the November 2028 presidential election). And 2029 is a long way away, given the number of balls Elon Musk has to juggle in the next few years to get Starship flying, meet NASA’s moon ambitions and sort out the challenges at xAI and Tesla.

What is much less clear, is what will happen to Globalstar’s C-3 constellation and the relationship with Apple after a sale. Would Apple continue to pay Starlink hundreds of millions of dollars per year to support connectivity on existing iPhones? Would the C-3 constellation still be completed, especially if it takes MDA another two years or more, by which time Starlink might have its own next generation Starlink Mobile constellation on orbit? That decision could go either way, depending on how confident SpaceX is that Starship will be ready to launch the next gen constellation on time.

Meanwhile, in other news, it seems that Viasat has concluded that it will have to put some of its own money on the line to get started with the 2800 satellite Equatys constellation, with RocketLab likely to be chosen as the satellite bus contractor. Plausibly, RocketLab’s recent $1B fundraising could be used to provide an equity injection into the Equatys joint venture.

And AST is telling people that it will now rely on New Glenn for 9 of its first 12 launches, implicitly confirming the rumors that the company can’t figure out how to stack satellites within the much smaller Falcon 9 fairing. Of course, there’s no way that New Glenn will provide AST with anything like 9 launches this year, so AST’s deployment plans will be pushed out even further.

The level of skepticism about AST at the conference is quite remarkable, but despite Starlink’s dominance, there’s little reason for mobile operators to withdraw their support in the immediate future. Instead, with Starlink’s next generation Starlink Mobile constellation at least two years away and alternatives including AST, Equatys and Lynk all on a similar timetable, MNOs can wait and see, and perhaps pray, that one or more alternatives to Starlink ultimately emerges, and that, in the meantime, more clarity emerges about whether their customers actually care about D2D at all.

03.06.26

The Iran question…

Posted in Aeronautical, Operators, SpaceX at 8:29 am by timfarrar

Last Sunday afternoon (4.11pm Pacific time), March 1, Elon Musk posted a curious tweet:

This came in response to another tweet about use of Starlink on US attack drones, but that’s not the important issue (and in fact, as it applies to US-approved uses, the statement is somewhat misleading: Starlink satellites are widely used in Ukraine for military purposes, with funding from the US Department of War, it’s just that SpaceX uses the Starshield brand for these sales, not the “commercial Starlink” service).

Musk’s tweet states that “weapon systems” using Starlink are “shut down when discovered”. So what did Starlink shut down right after this tweet? That became clear on Monday morning, when general aviation users started complaining that their Starlink service had been affected because “effective immediately, the maximum supported in-motion speed for Roam and Priority plans is 100 mph”. Instead Starlink has introduced Aviation 300 and Aviation 450 plans (with much higher pricing) that allow for usage at up to 300mph and 450mph respectively.

But what is even more notable is that the rules for these new plans require you to submit a scan of your passport, as well as details of the aircraft that the Starlink service will be used on. In contrast, all you need to sign up for the Roam plan is a credit card.

So what “weapon system” flies at not much more than 100mph and shouldn’t be provided to certain passport holders? We all know that Russian attack drones have been an issue in Ukraine and Starlink introduced a whitelisting process last month to address this. But it seems no one thought about Iran at that point in time.

And the remaining question is how did Musk “discover” this on Sunday? God forbid that the Iranian drone which killed six US servicemembers earlier in the day in Kuwait (and was described as “flying slow and low to the ground”) was using Starlink…

03.02.26

Starlink’s German alignment

Posted in Aeronautical, D2D, Globalstar, Operators, Regulatory, Services, SpaceX, Spectrum, T-Mobile at 7:36 am by timfarrar

It was fascinating to see today’s announcement at MWC, that Starlink is partnering with Deutsche Telekom to “support over 140M subscribers across 10 European countries“. Most remarkable is that DT is explicitly confirming that “the service will operate only in Starlink’s MSS (Mobile Satellite Service) spectrum”, effectively treating renewal of EchoStar’s existing 2GHz MSS license in Europe as a fait accompli.

That’s perhaps not surprising, because I’m told that an announcement from the EU on the process for reallocating the 2GHz licenses after they expire in spring 2027 remains stalled, and may take several more months to emerge. As a result, the expectation is that the current licenses (held by Viasat and EchoStar) will be extended, probably by two years, to allow time for that process (with appeals and a need for subsequent actions by national regulators) to conclude.

But there is a wider context here to the alignment between Starlink and Deutsche Telekom here, which is seemingly happening with the implicit backing of the German government (and makes me wonder what will happen to Tesla’s factory in Germany this week).

Back in January, news broke that Starlink had struck a fleetwide deal to equip Lufthansa’s aircraft with connectivity. After the prior loss of IAG to Starlink in November 2025, Lufthansa was the last remaining anchor customer for Viasat’s European Aviation Network (EAN).

Lufthansa’s defection fatally undermined the case to retain EAN in its current form and therefore has called into question the need for Viasat to retain 2x15MHz for its 2GHz MSS license. In supporting Viasat’s application for renewal, Lufthansa had even gone as far as to claim that “The EAN is a critical building block in continuing our journey to offer an industry-leading connectivity solution to our passengers.” Of course, it will take some time to replace the EAN terminals on both Lufthansa and IAG, but that just reinforces the rationale for a two-year extension to the current European 2GHz licenses, before any changes take place.

Those changes could potentially reduce both Viasat and EchoStar to paired 10MHz blocks and free up a third license for a European provider (prompting a fight between the AST/Vodafone partnership and the SES/Lynk/Omnispace grouping). But now I wonder if DT might switch its position and suggest cutting Viasat to 2x10MHz, in order to free up 2x5MHz for IoT, while leaving EchoStar/Starlink with the full 2x15MHz. Though whether that would fly with EU regulators is far from clear.

What is interesting is that Lufthansa’s decision to defect to Starlink was apparently very sudden, in fact I’m told that Lufthansa had been negotiating a major deal with another IFC provider for the last couple of years, which was close to being confirmed publicly, and rumors suggest that the German government had a hand in the switch.

Now we have a similar major deal between Deutsche Telekom and Starlink that comes after DT reportedly vetoed T-Mobile US’s plan to buy EchoStar’s spectrum last summer to enhance the partnership between TMUS and Starlink. And last June, DT had been just as unenthusiastic about any changes to the 2GHz band, stating that “Deutsche Telekom AG plans to continue operating the European Aviation Network (EAN) using the MSS 2GHz spectrum beyond 2027…preserving the current spectrum allocation is crucial for the continued operation and economic viability of the EAN.”

So the natural question is “what changed”? I’m told that even after vetoing the TMUS-EchoStar spectrum deal (and then replacing the TMUS CEO while privately characterizing TMUS as “going rogue”), DT continued investigating D2D options and was one of three companies that looked at Globalstar when that asset was put up for sale last fall (the other two being SpaceX and Apple).

But nothing happened there, and now DT has decided instead to strike a major partnership with Starlink, preferring to rely on the 2GHz MSS band over Globalstar’s Big LEO spectrum. And there’s even a DT panelist (Jaroslav Holis) scheduled to speak at the Equatys event on Wednesday which raises the question of what DT might have been exploring there. So I’m left wondering whether there are wider German political factors behind the decisions of both Lufthansa and Deutsche Telekom to reverse themselves in short order.