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OneWeb Claims a Win in Internet Space Race Against Musk and Bezos

OneWeb Claims a Win in Internet Space Race Against Musk and Bezos

(Bloomberg) -- OneWeb said it’s secured vital rights to the airwaves it needs to launch a global satellite broadband network.

The startup backed by Softbank Corp. is racing against billionaires Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos to install constellations of small satellites so they can offer 4G-like broadband to places that are too costly to reach using terrestrial networks.

By getting six of the washing machine-sized satellites broadcasting at the right frequencies for 90 days, OneWeb has met ‘use-it-or-lose-it’ spectrum conditions set by the United Nations’ International Telecommunication Union, the company said by email.

Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp. and Bezos’s Project Kuiper are likely to need the same spectrum. OneWeb says that being the first to file its claim and have it validated will mean signals from other operators must not interfere with its own, under rules that oblige latecomers to preserve the quality of services offered by an incumbent.

“That could mean a longer road to the finish line for others than it is for us,” said Ruth Pritchard-Kelly, OneWeb’s vice president of regulation.

U.K. communications watchdog Ofcom will now ask the ITU to register OneWeb’s priority claim on the bandwidth.

An ITU spokeswoman said the Geneva-based body had not yet received frequency claims for the OneWeb or SpaceX projects.

OneWeb has raised $3.4 billion from shareholders including Softbank, Airbus SE, Richard Branson’s Virgin Corp. and Qualcomm Inc. and plans to launch about 30 of the satellites per month from December to create an initial constellation of 648. Because they are thousands of kilometers closer to Earth than traditional models, they promise much lower transmission delays than existing satellite broadband services.

Musk’s SpaceX is also moving fast, sending dozens of satellites into orbit for its Starlink project and preparing for more launches this year after winning U.S. government approval for about 12,000 satellites. Project Kuiper is yet to launch any of its satellites.

To contact the reporter on this story: Thomas Seal in London at tseal@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rebecca Penty at rpenty@bloomberg.net, Thomas Pfeiffer, Jennifer Ryan

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