Microsoft Partners with SpaceX’s Starlink on Global Connectivity
Microsoft revealed a collaboration with SpaceX’s satellite service Starlink, in a project to boost connectivity in underserved and remote locations.
Under the deal unveiled earlier this weekMicrosoft’s cloud services will be paired with Starlink’s satellite network to connect rural areas where traditional infrastructure cannot meet demand.
“Through our collaboration with Starlink, Microsoft is combining low-Earth orbit satellite connectivity with community-based deployment models and local ecosystem partnerships,” Microsoft’s chief sustainability officer Melanie Nakagawa wrote in a blog post.
The rollout will begin in Kenya, connecting 450 “community hubs” such as farmer cooperatives, warehouses, storage depots and digital hubs across the country.
The project comes at the tail end of Microsoft’s mission to bring 250 million people online by the end of 2025, a milestone it says it has already surpassed by reaching more than 299 million users worldwide.
With this new deal, Microsoft said it is ramping up these targets and paving the way for the adoption of next-generation digital tools, including AI.
“These deployments combine satellite connectivity with digital skills, tools, and ecosystem coordination to support agricultural productivity, access to markets, and adoption of digital and AI-enabled services,” Nakagawa added. “Microsoft is working to ensure that everyone, everywhere, can participate in the digital and AI economy.”
The alliance comes at somewhat of a tense moment for the companies, with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, a co-founder of OpenAI, currently in a legal dispute with Microsoft and the generative AI vendor, seeking $134 billion for allegedly abandoning OpenAI’s original nonprofit mission.
Yet the legal battle appears not to have affected the companies’ collaborative efforts, instead marking a potentially important inflection point for both companies.
For Microsoft, the partnership strengthens its push into emerging markets, accelerating access in regions where terrestrial networks remain limited.
For Starlink, which already counts U.S. government agencies such as the U.S. Department of Defense and NASA among its customers, enterprise collaborations offer a new revenue stream as it continues to expand its satellite constellation.