Back to homeTechnologyArchive

Technology | Europe

How Satellite Internet Is Connecting the 2.6 Billion People Without Reliable Access

| 1 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
Technology editorial placeholder
EuroBulletin24 editorial graphic

Starlink and competing low-earth orbit satellite internet providers are connecting previously unserved communities. Here is the coverage, the cost, and the economic impact for rural communities.

The infrastructure inversion that satellite internet represents is worth stating clearly: the most remote, geographically disadvantaged communities on Earth — those whose location makes conventional internet infrastructure uneconomical — are the specific beneficiaries of low-earth orbit satellite internet constellations. For the first time, physical geography is not the determining factor in internet access quality.

SpaceX's Starlink constellation, which now numbers approximately 6,000 satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO), can provide broadband speeds of 100-200 Mbps anywhere on Earth's surface with latency of 20-40 milliseconds — latency low enough for video calls, online gaming, and real-time applications that previous satellite internet systems (which used geostationary satellites 35,786 kilometres above Earth) couldn't support at sub-600-millisecond latency.

The specific user populations benefiting most: rural farming communities in the US Midwest and Australian outback whose conventional broadband options were limited to cellular data with poor coverage. Maritime vessels whose crew members can now maintain contact with family during extended voyages. Remote research stations and humanitarian operations in previously connectivity-excluded locations. And, most significantly for global development, rural communities in developing countries where conventional infrastructure investment economics have never supported broadband deployment.

Amazon's Project Kuiper (currently launching satellites for commercial service launch), Eutelsat OneWeb, and several national LEO satellite internet programmes are creating competition that is beginning to reduce the cost of satellite internet from the premium price point that Starlink's first-mover advantage sustained. Current Starlink pricing of $120 per month (hardware at $599) is already declining under competitive pressure.

The economic development implications for connected rural communities are documented from early Starlink deployment data: remote work becomes viable, agricultural information services improve farm management decisions, telemedicine reaches previously unreachable communities, and educational resources become accessible independent of physical infrastructure. The digital divide between connected and unconnected communities — one of the most consequential economic divides of the 21st century — is narrowing from the most remote extremes inward.

#satellite-internet#starlink#connectivity#rural#developing#access
More in TechnologyBrowse full archive

Comments

0 comments
Checking account...
480 characters left
Loading comments...

Related coverage

Technology
Reese Witherspoon Says It's Time for Women to Embrace AI and She Wants to Learn With You — Here Is Her Vision
At CinemaCon 2026, Reese Witherspoon declared 'it's time' for women to embrace artificial intelligence and invited her a...
Technology
Quantum Computing Just Hit a Milestone That Changes What 'Impossible' Means for Technology
April 14 was World Quantum Day, and it arrived as major technology companies reported quantum computing achievements tha...
Technology
Tom Hardy Was Photographed in Barbados With His Wife and the Internet Decided This Was the Most Important News of the Week
## The Photographs and Why the Internet Needed Them In the first two weeks of April 2026, the specific combination of gl...
Technology
KATSEYE Dropped a New Song at Coachella and It Changed Everything We Thought About Group K-Pop in America
## The Coachella Drop That Nobody Saw Coming In the specific festival release dynamic that major music acts have used in...
Technology
The Michael Jackson Biopic Drops April 24 and Colman Domingo Plays Joe Jackson — Here Is What We Know
## The Film That Has Been Three Years in the Making Michael, the authorized biopic of Michael Jackson, opens in theaters...
Technology
San Francisco Just Opened an AI Grocery Store With 2 Human Employees — This Is What Shopping There Is Actually Like
## The Store Where the AI Does Almost Everything Andon Market, which opened in San Francisco in April 2026, operates wit...

More stories

Science
April 2026 Was the Hottest March Ever for the US Lower 48 — And El Niño Is Making It Worse
Entertainment
Sylvester Stallone Is Getting a Biopic and the Rocky Director Is Making It — Here Is Everything About 'I Play Rocky'
Entertainment
Tom Cruise's New Film 'Digger' Made CinemaCon 2026 Stop — Here Is What the Grand Entrance Revealed
Entertainment
Karol G's Coachella Weekend 2 Set Made History Twice in the Same Evening — Here Is What Happened
World
The US Just Sent a Diplomatic Delegation to Cuba for the First Time in Years — Here Is What Changed
Entertainment
Zendaya Is 'Disappearing' From Public Life After 2026 — Here Is What's Actually Happening
Entertainment
Michael B. Jordan Is Starring in 'The Thomas Crown Affair' Remake — Here Is Why This Casting Is Perfect
Entertainment
Demi Moore Just Joined Charlize Theron and Julia Garner in a New Amazon MGM Thriller — Here Is Everything About 'Tyrant'
World
Chicago O'Hare Is Cutting 2026 Summer Flights — Here Is Why This Affects Every American Traveler
Military
Ukraine's Long-Range Strikes Into Russia Are Prompting New Threats Against Europe — What's Happening
Entertainment
Henry Cavill's Highlander Reboot Showed First Footage at CinemaCon — Here Is Every Detail
Sports
Azzi Fudd Was the #1 WNBA Draft Pick and She Is Reuniting With Paige Bueckers — Here Is What It Means for the League