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Elon Musk's Starlink Blocked By French Court After Legal Battle With Environmental Groups

Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service has effectively lost its frequencies in France following a legal battle waged by environmental groups.

New Delhi: Tech billionaire Elon Musk's Starlink satellite internet service has effectively lost its frequencies in France following a legal battle waged by environmental groups. The decision was published by the Conseil d'Etat, France's Supreme Court for administrative justice, reports Teslarati. According to the court, the recent Starlink ruling negated a decision by Arcep, France's telecoms regulator, back in February 2021.

Arcep had granted Starlink two bands of frequencies that would link the company's satellite constellation to France-based customers, the report said. Since the decision to grant licenses to Starlink can "impact the market of access to high-bandwidth internet and affect the interests of end-users" as per the Conseil d'Etat, the satellite internet system should have carried out public hearings before its license was granted.

This was something that Arcep did not do. Stephen Kerckhove, who heads Act for the Environment, one of the environmental groups that took legal action against Starlink, stated that the ruling is a way for the State Council to "send a signal to those who confuse speed with haste".

Kerckhove also noted that he is hoping Arcep would not just go through a public consultation now for sheer compliance but "truly carry out an economic and environmental evaluation" of the satellite internet service.

Meanwhile, Musk is set to get fierce competition in the affordable satellite-based internet market as Amazon announced the biggest rocket deal in the commercial space industry's history, signing a pact with three rocket companies for up to 83 launches under its Project Kuiper internet satellites. The tech giant signed contracts for launches with United Launch Alliance (ULA), Arianespace, and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin. The financial details of the deal were not disclosed.

The contracts total up to 83 launches over a five-year period, providing capacity for Amazon to deploy the majority of its 3,236-satellite constellation.

"Project Kuiper will provide fast, affordable broadband to tens of millions of customers in unserved and underserved communities around the world," Dave Limp, Senior Vice President for Amazon Devices & Services had said.

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