Airtel to Ride on Starlink to Command Mobile Internet Market in Kenya


Kenya is set to be at the forefront of a big shift in mobile internet access across Africa, as a landmark partnership between Airtel Africa and SpaceX, leveraging its Starlink satellite constellation, targets service roll-out in 14 African markets.

Once finalized, Airtel Kenya says the deal will likely see it eclipse its competitors in mobile Internet market, reaching more users, while enabling faster speed at much affordable rates. 

Speaking during a media roundtable in Nairobi on Thursday, Airtel Africa CEO, Sunil Taldar told journalists that the direct-to-Cell system will offer up to 20 times improvements in data speed at much affordable rates, supporting video streaming, cloud services, and other bandwidth-intensive applications once only feasible on fibre or well-served 4G/5G. 

Taldar said that Airtel Africa is at advanced talks with SpaceX, indicating that the deal is likely to be sealed within the first half of the current financial year. 

The collaboration was first announced in December last year and is expected bring high-speed, low-latency internet connectivity to both urban centres and hard-to-reach rural regions that have long been underserved by traditional telecom infrastructure. 

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It will allow compatible mobile devices to connect directly to low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites without relying on extensive ground-based networks. 

“By bypassing the need for conventional towers in remote areas, where rugged geography and infrastructure costs traditionally limit connectivity, the technology is expected to dramatically widen access to digital services across our markets,’’ Taldar said. 

For Kenyan consumers and businesses, the partnership will herald several breakthroughs, including broader reach in regions where 3G, 4G, or fibre infrastructure is sparse. Although the cost benefits to users under this planned partnership is not yet clear, experts say that leveraging satellites to complement terrestrial networks could ultimately reduce the marginal cost of extending coverage particularly in low-density areas and exert downward pressure on retail prices in the long term.

This partnership is expected to further boost the country’s Internet penetration, currently at 49 per cent, with latest data by DataReportal showing that at least 27.4 million people are using Internet in the country. 

The country’s internet penetration and usage rates place it among the top performers on the continent, a distinction that brings both immense opportunities for its burgeoning digital economy and significant challenges, particularly in cyber security.

Kenya’s mobile internet market remains dominated by a few major players, with the regulator’s latest data confirming that Safaricom holds the largest share of mobile broadband subscriptions at around 63 per cent, followed by Airtel Kenya with roughly 32 per cent.

Smaller providers, including Telkom Kenya, Equitel, and Jamii Telecommunications account, accounting for the remainder. 

The deal is likely to dramatically push up satellite Internet market in the country, currently accounting for two per cent of total users. According to state data, the country had just 769 satellite internet users in 2017, with the number rising to 1,547 in 2018 but falling to 860 in 2021 and to 730 in 2022.

The change point came in 2023 when SpaceX’s Starlink entered the Kenyan market, with subscriptions jumping to 2,933, a 302 per cent year-on-year increase, the strongest growth ever recorded in the segment. This momentum accelerated even further in 2024, when subscriptions soared to 19,403. Even so, the rapid expansion of satellite Internet in Kenya has also prompted regulatory action; with authorities now mulling plans to introduce stringent identification requirements users.

Providers like Starlink have been asked to collect and verify national IDs from customers in person by May this year, a move officials say is intended to align satellite services with existing telecommunications Know-Your-Customer (KYC) rules and tackle cybercrime. 

Non-compliance could lead to service disruption for users who fail to verify by the set deadline. 

This requirement reflects growing concerns among regulators and incumbents about the oversight of satellite connectivity, which by design transcends borders and traditional licensing regimes. While geared toward enhancing accountability and safety, some industry watchers caution that strict ID mandates could slow adoption among certain rural or casual users. 

The Airtel-SpaceX partnership marks a strategic pivot in Kenya’s connectivity landscape. As Kenya and the continent prepare for this next phase of internet expansion, the interplay between satellite technology, traditional telco competition, and robust regulation is tipped to shape the digital future for millions across Africa. 

Go to TECHTRENDSKE.co.ke for more tech and business news from the African continent.

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Editorial Desk

Tracking and reporting on tech and business trends in Kenya and across Africa. Send tips to editorial@techtrendsmedia.co.ke

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