SpaceX CEO Elon Musk Set to Tout Starlink Progress at MWC 2021 as Cost, Demand Hurdles Linger

Musk has said Starlink could serve less than 5 percent of Internet users and still generate $30 billion (roughly Rs. 2,22,680 crores) a year in revenue.

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 29 June 2021 12:10 IST
Highlights
  • Recent heat waves have caused new problems
  • SpaceX has a lot of work to do to make the network reliable
  • Service should improve with more satellites and other improvements

Musk on Tuesday is expected to discuss Starlink's progress in a speech at the Mobile World Congress

Don Joyce, a Nokia director working from home at a remote lake cottage in Canada, recently abandoned his painfully slow phone-line Internet in favour of satellite broadband service Starlink, offered by Elon Musk's SpaceX.

Starlink, which cost him CAD 600 (roughly Rs. 36,000) for hardware and a lofty CAD 150 (roughly Rs. 9,000) monthly subscription, provides "blindingly fast" speeds when uploading videos or streaming movies, he said.

But the beta test customer said he experiences dropouts during calls on Microsoft Teams and Zoom.

Advertisement

"If you're in the city and you have alternatives, I wouldn't recommend it. But if you're in the country, like in the middle of nowhere and you're getting pathetic internet service, then it's definitely a competitor."

Advertisement

For billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk - founder of electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla - the success of one of his biggest bets may come down to just how many people like Joyce are out there.

Musk on Tuesday is expected to discuss Starlink's progress in a speech at the Mobile World Congress telecommunications event, an audience with a lot a stake in fate of Starlink. If the service is successful, it could vastly expand the reach of broadband Internet around the world, connect Tesla vehicles, and even provide a new platform for traders and others with exotic internet needs, people familiar with the Starlink plan said.

Advertisement

But to do that, it must avoid the fate of similar satellite ventures that have preceded it.

"Not bankrupt, that would be a big step," Musk said last year. "That's our goal."

Advertisement

SpaceX's Starlink division launched its "Better Than Nothing Beta programme" in the United States last October, with data speeds up to a competitive 150MB per second. Early reviews are mixed, with some users complaining of the problems that have always plagued satellite internet: sensitivity to weather.

Recent heat waves have caused new problems.

"I'm gonna have to spray it with a garden hose to reboot my Internet... That just feels so wrong," a Reddit user who said he lives in Arizona posted earlier this month, along with an error message saying "Offline: Thermal shutdown" and "Starlink will reconnect after cooling down".

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell in April said the firm has "a lot of work to do to make the network reliable". The company on Tuesday did not have an immediate comment.

Service should improve with more satellites and other improvements: Starlink has launched over 1,700 of its 260 kilogram satellites so far, and envisions more than 40,000.

The economics are daunting nonetheless. Musk has said Starlink could serve less than 5 percent of internet users and still generate $30 billion (roughly Rs. 2,22,650 crores) a year in revenue. Critics called that wishful thinking.

"Is the demand there for tens of millions of subscribers at that price point?" asked analyst Tim Farrar, president at TMF Associates. "In most parts of the world, if you said to someone, your broadband service will cost you 100 US dollars a month, they'd be like, incredulous."

He said there might be wealthy people in isolated areas, "but there's just not very many of those people".

He said Starlink would also struggle for enough capacity to support that level of demand, especially as people are consuming more data for video streaming. That would mean "significant additional expenditure on upgrading the satellites and adding more satellites."

Rural sunsidies

Pricing pain could be eased by nearly $900 million (roughly Rs. 6,680 crores) in Federal Communications Commission subsidies earmarked for Starlink for bringing the Internet to rural areas.

Jonathan Hofeller, SpaceX's vice president, said COVID-19 highlighted the need for "access to quality internet" anywhere on the globe.

Perhaps more importantly, Starlink said it can drive costs down by building its own terminals and satellites. It has hired engineers from chipmakers Broadcom, Qualcomm, and others to design its own communications chips, a person familiar with the matter said - an approach similar to that taken by Tesla.

Starlink has more than halved the terminal cost from $3,000 (roughly Rs. 2.2 lakhs) and expects it to be in a range of a few hundred dollars within the next year or two, Shotwell said in April.

"Lowering Starlink terminal cost, which may sound rather pedestrian, is actually our most difficult technical challenge," Musk tweeted last year.

Starlink also benefits from SpaceX's low-cost launch capability.

"When you own pieces of the stack, you can do really technically sophisticated things at an affordable cost," said Misha Leybovich, a former Starlink sales director.

Still, competition promises to be fierce. Amazon subsidiary Kuiper has a directly competing project, while OneWeb - a collapsed satellite operator rescued by the British government and India's Bharti Group - has vowed to be in the game as well. Terrestrial telecom providers, meanwhile, are racing to deploy high-speed, fifth-generation (5G) broadband services.

The rapid spread of wireless and terrestrial broadband, along with high prices, were significant factors in killing previous low-Earth-orbit satellite ventures. Motorola-backed Iridium Communications went through bankruptcy after billions of dollars in investment, while a similar fate met Teldesic, backed by Microsoft founder Bill Gates.

SpaceX, Amazon and a number of others have "created quite a race that no one is absolutely sure whether there is a big enough market for it," Iridium Chief Executive Matthew J. Desch told Reuters.

© Thomson Reuters 2021


We discuss the return of PUBG Mobile, sorry, Battlegrounds Mobile India on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: MWC 2021, Elon Musk, Starlink, SpaceX, Tesla
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iQOO Neo 11 With Snapdragon 8 Elite SoC Launched: Price, Specifications
  2. Top OTT Releases of the Week: Kantara Chapter 1, Lokah Chapter 1, Idli Kadai, and More
  3. Gemini 3 AI Model Will Be Released Soon, Says Google CEO Sundar Pichai
  4. Realme GT 8 Pro Will Launch in India in November With This Chipset
  5. Vivo X300 Series Launching Today: Everything You Need to Know
  6. Reliance Offers Free 18-Month Google AI Pro with Gemini, Veo to Jio Users
  7. How to Claim 18 Months of Free Google AI Pro Access on the MyJio App
  8. Samsung Galaxy S26 Series Teased to Launch With These Notable Upgrades
  9. Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 Chipset Key Specs, Benchmarks Leak
  10. Vivo S50 Pro Mini Key Specifications Tipped Ahead of Launch
  1. Vivo X300 Series Launched Globally With 200-Megapixel Zeiss Camera, Up to 6.78-Inch Display: Price, Features
  2. Canva Introduces Revamped Video Editor, New AI Tools and a Marketing Platform
  3. Bitchat Becomes Jamaica’s Go-to App as Hurricane Melissa Cripples Communication
  4. Google Maps Is Reportedly Developing a New Power Saving Mode for Navigation
  5. Take-Two CEO Says AI Won't Be 'Very Good' at Making a Game Like Grand Theft Auto
  6. Reliance Users to Get Free Google AI Pro Access for 18 Months Worth Rs. 35,100 With Gemini, Veo Features
  7. Meta’s VR Headsets and AI Glasses Cost the Company $4.4 Billion in Q3 2025
  8. iQOO Neo 11 With 7,500mAh Battery, Snapdragon 8 Elite Chip Launched: Price, Specifications
  9. Telegram Founder Pavel Durov Launches Cocoon, a Decentralised AI Project on TON
  10. Hedda (2025) Now Available for Streaming on Amazon Prime Video: What You Need to Know
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.