\"<p>Starlink
Starlink logo is seen on a smartphone in front of displayed Ukrainian flag in this illustration taken February 27, 2022. REUTERS\/Dado Ruvic\/Illustration<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>New Delhi: The world’s richest man Elon Musk-owned SpaceX has applied to the Department of Telecommunications<\/a> (DoT) for a global mobile personal communication by satellite services (GMPCS) licence to launch broadband-from-space services in India under its Starlink<\/a> brand.

The US
satcom<\/a> company has applied for the licence last week, officials said.

“SpaceX had earlier applied for an experimental license but withdrew it later. They have now applied for a GMPCS licence,” an official privy to the details told ET.

SpaceX is the third company to seek such a permit. DoT has already granted GMPCS licences to Bharti Group-backed OneWeb and
Reliance Jio Infocomm<\/a>’s satellite arm.

An email sent to SpaceX remained unanswered as of press time Monday.

ET had reported on October 12 that SpaceX would shortly apply for the license.

DoT officials, however, said getting a GMPCS licence does not mean that SpaceX can soon start services. After getting the licence, the company needs to get approval from the
Department of Space<\/a> and after that get spectrum allocated for offering services.

SpaceX will also need to establish in-country earth stations (satellite gateways) and deploy its global satellite bandwidth capacity in India. These clearances will have to come from the Indian National Space Promotion & Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe), a central regulatory body mandated to attract private capital in the space sector.

Competition is intensifying in India’s relatively nascent broadband-from-space services segment, which could be worth $13 billion by 2025, with
Jio<\/a>, OneWeb, Nelco of the Tata Group, Canada’s Telesat, and Amazon<\/a>, too, exploring launch of satellite broadband services in India.

Only three companies including SpaceX have sought licence from DoT so far, officials said.

Nelco and Telesat have done a proof of concept (PoC) but since the constellation is not ready yet, they have not applied for a licence.

Last year, SpaceX was forced to return pre-booking money to people in the country after DoT told the company to seek the regulatory approvals first before taking any pre-orders for its services.

\"Eutelsat<\/a><\/figure>

Eutelsat sees OneWeb merger lifting annual sales to $2 billion by 2027<\/a><\/h2>

The merger, announced in July and closely monitored by the French and British governments, aims to combine Eutelsat's geostationary satellite fleet with OneWeb's low-earth orbit constellation to offer fast internet services by satellite.<\/p><\/div>

\"&lt;p&gt;Starlink
Starlink logo is seen on a smartphone in front of displayed Ukrainian flag in this illustration taken February 27, 2022. REUTERS\/Dado Ruvic\/Illustration<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>New Delhi: The world’s richest man Elon Musk-owned SpaceX has applied to the Department of Telecommunications<\/a> (DoT) for a global mobile personal communication by satellite services (GMPCS) licence to launch broadband-from-space services in India under its Starlink<\/a> brand.

The US
satcom<\/a> company has applied for the licence last week, officials said.

“SpaceX had earlier applied for an experimental license but withdrew it later. They have now applied for a GMPCS licence,” an official privy to the details told ET.

SpaceX is the third company to seek such a permit. DoT has already granted GMPCS licences to Bharti Group-backed OneWeb and
Reliance Jio Infocomm<\/a>’s satellite arm.

An email sent to SpaceX remained unanswered as of press time Monday.

ET had reported on October 12 that SpaceX would shortly apply for the license.

DoT officials, however, said getting a GMPCS licence does not mean that SpaceX can soon start services. After getting the licence, the company needs to get approval from the
Department of Space<\/a> and after that get spectrum allocated for offering services.

SpaceX will also need to establish in-country earth stations (satellite gateways) and deploy its global satellite bandwidth capacity in India. These clearances will have to come from the Indian National Space Promotion & Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe), a central regulatory body mandated to attract private capital in the space sector.

Competition is intensifying in India’s relatively nascent broadband-from-space services segment, which could be worth $13 billion by 2025, with
Jio<\/a>, OneWeb, Nelco of the Tata Group, Canada’s Telesat, and Amazon<\/a>, too, exploring launch of satellite broadband services in India.

Only three companies including SpaceX have sought licence from DoT so far, officials said.

Nelco and Telesat have done a proof of concept (PoC) but since the constellation is not ready yet, they have not applied for a licence.

Last year, SpaceX was forced to return pre-booking money to people in the country after DoT told the company to seek the regulatory approvals first before taking any pre-orders for its services.

\"Eutelsat<\/a><\/figure>

Eutelsat sees OneWeb merger lifting annual sales to $2 billion by 2027<\/a><\/h2>

The merger, announced in July and closely monitored by the French and British governments, aims to combine Eutelsat's geostationary satellite fleet with OneWeb's low-earth orbit constellation to offer fast internet services by satellite.<\/p><\/div>