
On a clear September morning at Cape Canaveral, Florida, the thunder of an Atlas V rocket carried with it more than just metal and circuitry.
Aboard were 27 Kuiper satellites, part of Amazon’s ambitious plan to build a constellation of more than 3,200 spacecraft in low-Earth orbit.
The mission: beam affordable, high-speed internet to every corner of the world, from bustling megacities to remote hamlets where mobile coverage fades into silence.
“Six years ago, we embarked on the journey to build the most sophisticated communication system in the world,” said Rajeev Badyal, Vice President Technology, Kuiper Satellite Network.
“There’re almost 3 billion people that don’t have high speed internet connectivity. Imagine if they have the ability to be connected like you and I do, what they could do and what contributions they can make,” added Rajeev Badyal.
Director MiMi Aung lauded the launch saying that the mission is ambitious and is truly worth it because it would impact communities across that are hard to reach with fiber traditional communication and whose only solution can be solved by space.
“Project Kuiper is not just about technology — it’s about connecting unserved and underserved communities across the globe.,” said MiMi Aung.
The launch is aimed at developing the most advanced network in the world.
“This launch is an incredible milestone,” said Gary Wentz, Vice President of Government and Commercial Programs at United Launch Alliance (ULA), moments after liftoff.
For most viewers, the rocket trail symbolized another stride in the growing space-race of satellite broadband.
But for teachers and children in Kenya’s Marsabit County, where connectivity is as scarce as rain, the launch felt like a distant beacon of hope.
At Ndikir Primary School in Laisamis, headteacher Meshack Lebarakwe has turned mountaintops into makeshift offices.
With no reliable signal at school, he hikes uphill with his phone, balancing on rocks to catch a faint connection.
It’s the only way to download exam materials or submit mandatory reports.
“Sometimes I spend the whole day just trying to register pupils for KCPE,” Meshack says.
“When we had COVID-19, our children lost an entire year of learning because we had no internet, no electricity, nothing. They were simply cut off.”
The pupils’ dreams remain tethered to outdated textbooks and chalkboards, even as the world barrels into an age of AI-driven classrooms and virtual learning.
“Our children deserve the same opportunities as those in Nairobi,” Meshack adds. “Internet here would change everything.”
Amazon unveiled Project Kuiper in 2019, envisioning a constellation of 3,236 satellites orbiting between 590 and 630 kilometers above Earth.
The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted approval in 2020, requiring Amazon to deploy half the system by 2026.
Unlike ground-based broadband, Kuiper satellites promise direct-to-home connectivity through compact terminals, about the size of a laptop, that can be installed on rooftops or schoolyards. Amazon says its terminals will cost less than $400 each, with subscription fees designed to remain accessible even in lower-income regions.
“What makes Kuiper different,” explains Rajeev Badyal, “is not just scale but affordability. We are determined to make high-speed internet affordable for every community, no matter how remote.”
The constellation aims to rival SpaceX’s Starlink and OneWeb, but with Amazon’s vast retail and cloud ecosystem behind it, Kuiper has the potential to integrate commerce, education, and even e-health services into its orbit.
As the Atlas V climbed into the sky, ULA launch commentators Britt Porcelli and Ryan Schleitert kept viewers tethered to each stage of the mission.
“Today is not just about satellites,” Porcelli said during the live broadcast. “It’s about extending opportunity to billions who have been left offline.”
Schleitert added, “Every satellite deployed today represents a classroom that could be connected, a clinic that could access critical data, or a small business ready to compete globally. That’s the promise riding on this rocket.”
Despite rapid expansion of mobile networks, Africa still carries the world’s deepest connectivity gap. According to the World Bank, more than 600 million Africans lack internet access.
In Marsabit, where pastoralist families move across arid landscapes in search of pasture, traditional infrastructure investments make little economic sense for telecom providers. The result: whole villages left in digital darkness.
At Koor Secondary School, science teacher laments how her students cannot stream basic lab demonstrations.
“We tell them about experiments they have never seen,” she says. “If they had the internet, they could watch, learn, and even connect with other schools. But here, they are left behind.”
Africa has already tasted the promise, and pitfalls of satellite internet. Starlink, run by Elon Musk’s SpaceX, began limited operations in Kenya in 2023.
But with equipment costs around KES 89,000 ($600) and monthly subscriptions near KES 6,500 ($45), adoption has been confined to NGOs, businesses, and wealthier households. OneWeb, backed by the UK government and Bharti Enterprises, also eyes Africa but remains focused on corporate and institutional customers.
In Marsabit County, 16.3 percent of the population are internet users.
In remote northern counties including Turkana (12.7%), West Pokot (9.1%) and Tana River (15.5%), usage remains among the lowest in Kenya. Internet usage tends to be very low — often below 20 percent — in such regions, according to the Communication Authority of Kenya.
“The danger is that Kuiper becomes another high-tech toy for elites,” warns IT expert and Robotics teacher at Karare AIC Primary School Samuel Oduor Mamo.
“But if aligned with community needs, it can close gaps that decades of infrastructure could not.”
Amazon must deploy half of its constellation by 2026, or risk losing its FCC license.
That timeline aligns with Kenya’s pledge of universal internet access by 2030, part of its Digital Superhighway agenda.
“Every day without the internet is a day lost for millions of African children,” says Samuel Oduor. “The stakes are that high.”
Amazon’s entry into the satellite broadband race is not just philanthropy. It is also a business. By connecting new markets, Kuiper could expand Amazon’s e-commerce reach, AWS cloud services, and even fintech ventures. But for families in Marsabit, motives matter less than results.
“If Kuiper brings the internet to our school,” says teacher James Kilonzo, “it doesn’t matter why they came. What matters is that our children can finally learn like the rest of the world.”
As the Atlas V faded into the blue, the commentary of Porcelli and Schleitert underscored a truth that resonates far beyond Florida.
Satellite constellations are not judged in the skies but on the ground — in whether a girl in North Horr can attend virtual math class, or a mother in Laisamis can consult a doctor by phone.
Project Kuiper’s promise is bold: to make connectivity universal.
But its success will be measured in quieter victories, when Meshack no longer climbs hills for signal, when Oduor’s students finally see a chemistry experiment, when Africa’s children discover that the digital world belongs to them too.
Until then, the rocket’s fire remains both a spectacle and a symbol of technology racing ahead, and the urgent duty to ensure no one is left in silence.
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Jacob Walter from Nairobi, Kenya is an award-winning multimedia journalist telling impactful stories at the intersection of climate, energy, health, biodiversity and technology.
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