New Delhi (TIP)- Elon Musk-owned Starlink has received the last remaining regulatory clearance from the government, paving the way for the company to start offering satcom services in India. In May, the company had received an operator licence from the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) — three years after first applying for one — and on July 9, the Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) granted authorisation to the satcom company for its satellite constellation.
“IN-SPACe has granted authorisation to Starlink Satellite Communications for enabling provisioning of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites constellation, namely Starlink Gen1,” the agency, which operates under the Department of Space, said in a statement. It added that the authorisation will enable Starlink to provide satellite communication services in India.
“IN-SPACe authorisation to (Starlink) has a validity period of five years from the date of authorisation or end of operational life of Gen1 constellation — whichever is earlier. The roll-out of services is subject to the stipulated regulatory provisions and requisite clearance/approval/license from the relevant government department(s),” it added.
The Starlink Gen1 Constellation is a global constellation with 4,408 satellites orbiting earth in altitude varying between 540-570 km, capable of providing around 600 Gbps throughput over India.
Since turning its attention to launching services in India three years ago, Starlink came up against the country’s telecom giants Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel, and differed with the former over how frequency for such airwaves should be assigned to satcom operators. While Starlink lobbied for administrative allocation, Jio made a pitch for the auction route. The government had opted for the administrative route, given that spectrum used for satellite communication is shared spectrum and is technically difficult to auction.
While the telcos and Starlink will compete against each other to offer their services in the country, a market that is expected to cater to largely well-to-do families in urban areas owing to the communication service’s higher cost, Starlink had inked separate retail partnerships with Jio Platforms, a subsidiary of Reliance Industries, and Airtel, for them to offer its service to their customers.
How do satcom services work
Satellite communication services rely on an array of satellites in orbit to offer connectivity to homes and businesses on the ground. They are an alternative to ground-based communication, called terrestrial networks, such as cable, fibre, or digital subscriber line (DSL), and they don’t require wires to transmit data. Starlink operates the world’s largest satellite constellation, with around 7,000 satellites in orbit.
For end-users, satellite-based communication and broadband services offer benefits on two key points: wider coverage, and a more resilient network. Even though the latency of satcom services can at times be higher than terrestrial broadband networks, they can cover vast swathes of areas with very little physical equipment needing to be installed.
DoT guidelines for satcom companies
In May, the DoT had released guidelines for satellite communication companies. The norms call for companies to set up local manufacturing, data localisation, use domestic navigation systems, implement a blocking mechanism, and cooperate with law enforcement agencies.
According to the guidelines, satcom companies will have to share with the government a year-wise phased manufacturing plan aiming at indigenisation to a level of at least 20 per cent of their ground segment of the satellite network that is established at the end of 5 years after launching commercial operations.
Musk’s Starlink receives final nod for offering satcom services in India

Comments
23 responses to “Musk’s Starlink receives final nod for offering satcom services in India”
-
You are a very smart person!
-
I discovered your blog site on google and check a few of your early posts. Continue to keep up the very good operate. I just additional up your RSS feed to my MSN News Reader. Seeking forward to reading more from you later on!…
-
Hey very nice website!! Man .. Excellent .. Amazing .. I will bookmark your website and take the feeds also…I am happy to find so many useful info here in the post, we need work out more strategies in this regard, thanks for sharing. . . . . .
-
Hello, Neat post. There’s an issue along with your site in internet explorer, might check this?K IE still is the marketplace leader and a huge part of folks will omit your magnificent writing because of this problem.
-
wonderful points altogether, you simply received a brand new reader. What could you suggest in regards to your put up that you just made some days in the past? Any positive?
-
Whats up very cool website!! Man .. Beautiful .. Wonderful .. I’ll bookmark your blog and take the feeds also?KI’m glad to search out numerous useful info here within the publish, we want work out more techniques in this regard, thank you for sharing. . . . . .
-
It¦s actually a nice and helpful piece of info. I¦m happy that you just shared this helpful info with us. Please stay us up to date like this. Thank you for sharing.
-
You really make it seem so easy along with your presentation however I in finding this matter to be actually something which I think I would by no means understand. It sort of feels too complex and extremely broad for me. I’m having a look ahead in your next put up, I?¦ll attempt to get the cling of it!
-
Very nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to say that I’ve truly enjoyed surfing around your blog posts. In any case I’ll be subscribing to your feed and I hope you write again very soon!
-
F*ckin’ remarkable issues here. I am very satisfied to peer your post. Thank you a lot and i’m looking ahead to contact you. Will you please drop me a mail?
-
Right now it sounds like Movable Type is the best blogging platform out there right now. (from what I’ve read) Is that what you’re using on your blog?
Leave a Reply