Amazon.com plans to spend billions of dollars building a network of thousands of satellites to provide broadband Internet service, CEO Jeff Bezos said.
The Project Kuiper initiative, disclosed earlier this year, is the type of big bet the company needs to keep making as its massive scale renders smaller endeavours less meaningful, Bezos said Thursday at Amazon’s re:Mars conference in Las Vegas.
The project, he said, is “a very good business for Amazon” because it requires a big capital expenditure. “It’s multiple billions of dollars of capex. Amazon is a large enough company now that we need to be doing things that, if they work, can actually move the needle.”
In filings with the International Telecommunications Union, Amazon said it aimed to place 3 236 satellites into low-Earth orbit, and use them to beam broadband Internet connectivity across the globe. The project is separate from Bezos’s space launch vehicle maker, Blue Origin.
“By definition you end up accessing people who are kind of, underbandwidthed,” Bezos said. “Rural areas, remote areas. And I think you can see that, going forward, access to broadband is going to be very close to a fundamental human need.”
Bezos was speaking about the project when an animal rights activist rushed the stage. The protester was taken backstage by security personnel without incident. — Reported by Matt Day, (c) 2019 Bloomberg LP