# satellite%20internet
Latest news and articles about satellite%20internet
Total: 16 articles found

China Readies Upgraded Long March 8A at Hainan Pad as Rocket Fleet Gears Up for High‑Cadence Constellation Launches
China has transported an upgraded Long March 8A rocket to the Hainan commercial launch pad ahead of an imminent flight. The 8A boosts payload to about seven tonnes to a 700 km sun‑synchronous orbit and is designed to support high‑cadence deployments for satellite‑internet constellations, as part of a roughly 15‑flight plan for the series this year.

China Announces Push for AI Mega‑Compute, Satellite Internet and Nuclear Fusion in New Wave of State Megaprojects
At a March 6 economic briefing, NDRC director Zheng Zhanjie announced China will accelerate major projects in ultra‑large AI computing, satellite internet and controlled nuclear fusion as part of a broader push for strategic, high‑investment industries. The plans signal Beijing’s intent to marshal state and market resources behind technologies deemed essential for long‑term economic and strategic independence.

China Elevates Satellite Internet and Aerospace to National 'Pillar' Industry Status — A Big Bet on LEO Constellations
China’s 2026 government work report names satellite internet explicitly and for the first time classifies aerospace as an ‘‘emerging pillar industry,’’ accelerating state support for mass-deployed LEO constellations. Ambitious domestic programmes, massive ITU frequency filings and a looming need for hundreds of heavy launches mark a strategic push with both commercial upside and technical, regulatory and geopolitical risks.

China Turns Up the Heat on Strategic Tech: Long March 8A’s March 13 Debut, a Quantum Commercialisation Push and Huawei’s 896‑line LiDAR
China this week signalled a stepped‑up push to turn laboratory advances into industrial capacity: the Long March‑8A rocket is set to fly on March 13 to support large satellite constellations; leading quantum scientist Pan Jianwei vowed faster commercialisation during the 15th Five‑Year Plan; and Huawei’s Qian Kun released a mass‑production 896‑line LiDAR that promises image‑level perception for cars. Together these moves tighten China’s position across space launch, quantum tech and autonomous‑vehicle sensing, with consequences for global markets and strategic competition.

SpaceX Signals Imminent Starship Test as It Lines Up a Mid‑2027 Starlink Push — Moon and Mars Both Priorities
SpaceX executives say the next Starship test is imminent and that the rocket is being readied to launch an upgraded Starlink mobile constellation beginning mid‑2027. Starship’s success is pivotal to SpaceX’s operational expansion, potential IPO valuation and long‑term plans for lunar and Martian missions.

Musk Says Starlink Will Soon Operate Beyond Earth — A Step Toward Space-Based Connectivity
Elon Musk announced that Starlink will soon operate beyond Earth, signalling SpaceX’s intention to make its satellite broadband an integral part of lunar and interplanetary missions. Realising that ambition will require technical changes, regulatory coordination and the maturation of SpaceX’s launch capabilities, while raising strategic questions about spectrum, debris and military use.

Amazon’s Kuiper Advances: 32 LEO Satellites Ride a European Launcher into Orbit
Amazon launched 32 more low-Earth-orbit satellites for its Kuiper broadband network aboard a European rocket, marking another incremental step toward its multi-thousand-satellite constellation. The flight highlights Kuiper’s reliance on international launch partners, Europe's competitiveness in commercial launches, and mounting concerns about orbital congestion and governance.

Amazon Cleared to Add 4,500 Satellites — Kuiper’s LEO Service Nears Launch as Orbital Competition Intensifies
The FCC has authorised Amazon to add 4,500 satellites, bringing its Kuiper/Leo constellation to about 7,700 craft and positioning the company to start commercial LEO internet service later this year. Amazon is accelerating launches through multiple providers, seeking deadline relief from the FCC, and entering a scaling race with SpaceX, whose far larger satellite ambitions could reshape launch economics and orbital governance.

Musk’s SpaceX–xAI Tie-Up Pushes His Net Worth Past the $800bn Mark — and Raises Strategic Stakes
Elon Musk’s SpaceX and xAI have merged in a deal that Forbes estimates added roughly $84 billion to his net worth, pushing him past the $800 billion threshold to a record level around $852 billion. The combined company is being valued privately at about $1.25 trillion, with Musk holding an estimated 43% stake, and is preparing for an eventual IPO and index inclusion that could unlock significant liquidity.

SpaceX to Absorb xAI — Musk Bets on Marrying Artificial Intelligence with Orbital Infrastructure
SpaceX has announced the acquisition of Elon Musk’s AI company xAI, signaling an intention to integrate advanced AI capabilities with the Starlink satellite network. The deal could reshape competition between cloud and AI incumbents while raising regulatory and security questions about data, export controls and dual-use applications.

China’s Commercial Space Race Eyes 2026 as the Year of Reusable Rockets
At a Beijing forum, chief engineers from three leading Chinese commercial space firms unveiled competing plans to prove reusable rocket technology in 2026. Their strategies differ—batch production and engine upgrades, large kerolox modular rockets, and a dual small/large vehicle path—yet all target lower costs and higher cadence to serve satellite‑internet constellations.

LandSpace Plans 2026 Push to Validate Zhuque-3 First‑Stage Reuse Across Flight Data, Recovery Tests and Routine Operations
LandSpace will pursue a three‑pronged 2026 programme to validate first‑stage recovery and reuse for its Zhuque‑3 rocket: flight‑data analysis on re‑entry aerothermal and structural issues, another recovery flight test tied to constellation launches, and work to normalise post‑recovery maintenance and reliability. Success would advance China’s private space sector toward higher cadence, lower‑cost launches, but scaling reuse into routine operations remains the critical challenge.