Facebook goes Spacebook with Zuckerberg to launch Africa satellite

The social network giant is targeting more users in the continent with spacecraft designed to 'beam down connectivity', says the chief executive.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg said the satellite will 'beam down connectivity' to rural parts of sub-Saharan Africa. Mandel Ngan / AFP
Powered by automated translation

Bloomberg

Facebook will launch a satellite later this week to extend internet access to rural parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said.

The satellite will “beam down connectivity”, he said in a presentation on Wednesday in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital. “We built these solar-powered drones that are basically like a cellphone tower in the sky. They can go over really remote rural locations and beam down connectivity to make sure networks spread and reach everyone.”

The US social media company opened its first Africa office in Johannesburg last year and agreed to a deal with Paris-based Eutelsat Communications to launch the satellite.

The move is intended to enable Facebook to add users in parts of the continent that do not have internet access, increasing the company’s reach.

While internet-by-satellite is usually a costly option in the developing world, Mr Zuckerberg said he planned to make accessing the network affordable.

“It’s not much good having the infrastructure if people cannot afford to use it,” he said.

Facebook had 84 million users in sub-Saharan Africa at the end of July, compared with 1.7 billion worldwide. To overcome obstacles such as the lack of high-speed connectivity on the continent, the company rolled out products that can function on slower connections, including Facebook Lite.

business@thenational.ae

Follow The National's Business section on Twitter