Technology companies pledge to provide satellites to pull countries out of the "digital desert" Technology companies pledge to provide satellites to pull countries out of the "digital desert"

Technology companies pledge to provide satellites to pull countries out of the "digital desert"

Technology companies pledge to provide satellites to pull countries out of the "digital desert"


The United Nations communications agency announced that low-altitude satellites can give hope to millions, as only 36% of the population of the 46 poorest countries in the world can connect to the Internet, according to the International Telecommunication Union.

The United Nations Communications Agency announced on Sunday, on the sidelines of the Least Developed Countries Conference in Doha, that only a third of the world's population can connect to the Internet, but low-altitude satellites can give hope to millions, especially in remote parts of Africa.

Giant technology companies, including Microsoft, have pledged to help populations suffering from poor infrastructure and Internet services transition to the era of network connectivity, as satellites will play a major role, while other companies send thousands of next-generation transmitters to low Earth orbit.

Currently, only 36% of the 1.25 billion people in the world's 46 poorest countries have access to the Internet, according to the International Telecommunication Union.

In contrast, more than 90% of the European Union's population has access to the Internet.

The International Telecommunication Union condemned the "staggering international communication gap" which it said had widened over the past decade.

This gap was among the main complaints at the United Nations Conference of the Least Developed Countries, with UN Secretary-General António Guterres noting that these countries were being abandoned in the context of the "digital revolution".

The digital scarcity is particularly severe in some African countries, including the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where barely a quarter of the country's 100 million people have access to the network.

And while Internet access is easy in major cities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo such as Kinshasa, large rural areas and vast areas where rebel groups have been active for more than two decades are a digital desert.

Technology experts during the Doha conference predicted that the launch of thousands of satellites into low Earth orbit would bring rapid change and boost Africa's hopes.

"Overtake other countries"

Satellite coverage will play a major role in Microsoft's pledge to enable 100 million Africans to access the Internet by 2025, something that was outlined prior to the start of the conference.

Microsoft announced a first phase involving five million Africans in December and last week added a pledge to cover another 20 million people.

The first five million people will be connected to Viasat, one of the companies that sends satellite constellations into space to compete with terrestrial fiber broadband.

Elon Musk's "SpaceX" and "Star Link" companies will send thousands of satellites into orbit at an altitude of between 400 and 700 km from Earth.

Microsoft president Brad Smith said that upon seeing the 20 million-person figure his team proposed last year, he asked, "Is that realistic?" But now he's convinced it's possible.

He pointed out that "the cost of technology has decreased dramatically and will continue to decline... This is one of the factors that allow moving so quickly to reach a population segment of this size."

"African countries have an opportunity to leapfrog and overtake other countries when it comes to regulatory structure for things like wireless," he added.

"We can reach a lot more people than we could with fixed-line technology five, 10 or 15 years ago," he continued.

"optimists"

Rich countries have largely allocated available bandwidth to telecom and television.

"In Africa, bandwidth is not used and is therefore available as governments move to provide this connection to more people," Smith said.

Microsoft is working with Liquid Intelligent Technologies to provide Internet to the second tranche, which includes 20 million people.

Providing internet access and digital skills training to thousands of Africans is part of an effort to provide a private sector alternative to "foreign aid," Smith said. "We are optimistic about what digital technology can do for development."

But the Microsoft chief acknowledged that the private sector suffers from an "unfortunate lack of development and investment" in many economies of least developed countries.

Liquid Intelligence says it has 100,000 km of onshore fiber in Africa but is moving to expand its presence into satellite.

"These are hard-to-reach areas," said Nick Rudnick, executive vice president of the company. "Satellite is usually the only or most reliable technology for securing fast and stable broadband internet."

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