Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canada Invests $85M Into Advanced Satellites To Connect Rural, Remote Regions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2019 07:09 PM

    OTTAWA - The federal government is investing $85 million into an advanced satellite technology designed to expand access to affordable, high-speed internet across Canada's rural and remote regions.

     

    The funding is to help Ottawa-based Telesat develop a group of co-ordinated satellites — also known as a constellation — in low Earth orbit.

     

    A news release from Telesat says the new partnership with the federal government is expected to bring in $1.2 billion in revenue over 10 years.

     

    Under the agreement, Telesat will support around 500 jobs in Canada, invest $215 million into research and development over the next five years and promote education in the field of science and technology.

     

    Telesat launched its first low-Earth-orbit satellite last year and the full constellation will eventually include 298 satellites.

     

    In its spring budget, the Liberal government said low-Earth-orbit satellite capacity would be part of its $1.7-billion vow to help rural and remote areas in Canada gain access to reliable, high-speed internet service.

     

    Telesat says its state-of-the-art satellite constellation will involve launching highly advanced satellites into low Earth orbit, which is about 1,000 km from the surface of the planet — much closer than traditional satellites.

     

    The satellites will "seamlessly integrate with terrestrial networks," the company says.

     

    Other companies have announced bigger plans using similar technology: Amazon is behind a 3,200-satellite project; entrepreneur Elon Musk's SpaceX has a vision for a 12,000-satellite network. Satellites in low orbit can provide much faster, more responsive digital services than ones in high orbit that are available already, but it takes far more of them to cover the same area.

     

    In March, the federal government earmarked between $5 billion and $6 billion in new investments over the next decade for a plan to make sure 95 per cent of Canadian homes and businesses will have access to high-speed Internet by 2026.

     

    It also set a target of 100-per-cent connectivity throughout the country by 2030.

     

    In addition to the development of low-orbit satellite technology, the government plan also includes investments aimed at encouraging more private-sector spending on rural high-speed Internet and better co-ordination among provinces and territories.

     

    The budget also announced the federal infrastructure bank would seek to invest $1 billion over the next decade as a way to attract $2 billion in additional private investments towards expanding connectivity.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Relief In Sight For Southeastern Canada Following Weekend Heat Wave

    Environment Canada meteorologist Catherine Brabant said that while parts of southern Quebec, Ontario and the Maritimes remained under heat warnings early Sunday afternoon

    Relief In Sight For Southeastern Canada Following Weekend Heat Wave

    Food Fight: Liberals, Tories Trade Shots As Pre-campaign Battles Intensify

    Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor is trying to distinguish the Liberals as a party of scientific, evidence-based policy while she says Conservative Leader Andrew 

    Food Fight: Liberals, Tories Trade Shots As Pre-campaign Battles Intensify

    Huawei Canada Says It Met Federal Security Requirements For New Arctic 4G Project

    Huawei Canada says it has received federal approval to work with a northern telecom company and an Inuit development corporation to extend high-speed 4G

    Huawei Canada Says It Met Federal Security Requirements For New Arctic 4G Project

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son
    Police say the investigation is ongoing, and they aren't ruling out returning to the air if investigators are able to narrow the search area.

    Provincial Police Suspend Aerial Search For Missing Businessman, Son

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill
    A Calgary judge is denying British Columbia's attempt to block Alberta's so-called Turn Off the Taps bill.

    Alberta Judge Denies B.C.'s Bid To Block 'Turn Off The Taps' Bill

    Group Of Teenagers Visiting Canada From Brazil Assaulted Aboard Vancouver’s 95 B-line For Not Speaking English

    Metro Vancouver Transit Police is appealing for witnesses in the case where group of teenagers visiting Canada from Brazil were assaulted aboard the 95 B-Line bus

    Group Of Teenagers Visiting Canada From Brazil Assaulted Aboard Vancouver’s 95 B-line For Not Speaking English