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SpaceX’s Starlink Is Testing Internet Service for Aircraft

SpaceX’s Starlink unit is testing its space-based internet service with several aircraft and wants to offer in-flight connections.

SpaceX’s Starlink Is Testing Internet Service for Aircraft
Starlink modem. (Source: ErcXspace/Twitter)

SpaceX’s Starlink unit is testing its space-based internet service with several aircraft and wants to offer in-flight connection to airlines “as soon as possible,” a company vice president said.

Starlink is in talks with several airlines about offering in-flight broadband connections, Jonathan Hofeller, vice president of commercial sales, said Tuesday on a panel at the Airline Passenger Experience Association gathering in Long Beach, California. That would put the company in direct competition with Viasat Inc., Intelsat SA, Telesat Corp. and others.

Starlink is producing six satellites a week at its assembly site near Seattle, Hofeller said. It is also moving to a more sophisticated version. He didn’t disclose details of the testing or how advanced the company’s discussions with airlines are.

The Space Explored blog reported Monday that SpaceX founder Elon Musk raised the potential of a bankruptcy filing in an internal memo if the company is unable to fix production issues on its Raptor engines, which power the company’s newest and largest rocket, Starship. The vehicle is needed to launch the next iteration of Starlink’s satellites, Musk wrote. 

Space Exploration Technologies Corp., as SpaceX is formally known, is working toward a constellation of more than 30,000 satellites to provide high-speed internet coverage around the world.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.