Vodacom Group has signed a wide-ranging agreement with Starlink to integrate low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite backhaul into its mobile networks and to resell Starlink services to enterprise and small-business customers across Africa. Vodacom aims to use Starlink’s low-latency links to accelerate rural coverage expansion, improve network performance in hard-to-reach regions, and support digital services in remote schools, clinics, and communities. The two companies framed the partnership as a scalable method to connect areas where traditional infrastructure build-outs remain economically or physically challenging.
Vodacom will incorporate Starlink’s connectivity into a portfolio of industry-specific solutions targeting mining, oil and gas, agriculture, tourism, retail, and financial services. The suite includes pay-as-you-use backup internet, “unbreakable” branch connectivity, device-as-a-service models, and branch network pooling that blends terrestrial and satellite networks. Vodacom said Starlink complements its existing footprint, which already includes 4G, 5G, fiber, MPLS, microwave, and GEO satellite services across its regional markets.
The deal also supports Vodacom’s Vision 2030 growth plan, which targets 260 million customers and 120 million financial-services users within five years. Starlink, now active in 25 African countries, will gain broader distribution and integration channels across enterprise verticals and rural mobile networks through Vodacom’s regional footprint.
• LEO satellite backhaul strengthens Vodacom’s rural mobile coverage strategy
• Partnership includes enterprise resell rights and localized service packaging
• Solutions target heavy industries, agriculture, and multi-site retail
• Complements Vodacom’s terrestrial networks (4G, 5G, fiber, microwave, GEO)
• Supports Vodacom’s Vision 2030 customer-growth goals
“We are delighted to collaborate with Starlink, a move that accelerates our mission to connect every African to the internet,” said Shameel Joosub, Vodacom Group CEO. “Low Earth orbit satellite technology will help bridge the digital divide where traditional infrastructure is not feasible, and this partnership will unlock new possibilities for the unconnected.”
🌐 Analysis
Starlink is continuing its push into carrier partnerships as LEO backhaul gains traction in mobile networks, fixed-wireless deployments, and enterprise connectivity. Below is a consolidated list of known Starlink carrier partners globally (based on publicly announced agreements):
Starlink Carrier Partners (Public Announcements to Date)
• Vodacom Group (Africa) – Rural coverage expansion, enterprise resell, satellite backhaul
• MTN Group (Africa) – Network backhaul and enterprise distribution (selected markets)
• Telkom Kenya (Kenya) – LEO backhaul for remote coverage
• Paratus Group (Africa) – Distribution in Namibia and regional enterprise markets
• Telstra (Australia) – LEO backhaul for mobile coverage in remote regions
• Optus (Australia) – Satellite-to-mobile and backhaul collaboration
• KDDI (Japan) – Starlink backhaul for rural coverage and enterprise services
• SoftBank (Japan) – Enterprise connectivity and remote-site access
• Entel (Chile and Peru) – Rural coverage and enterprise distribution
• Empresa Nacional de Telecomunicaciones / ENTEL Bolivia – Remote-coverage solutions
• Claro (Brazil and Peru; via local distribution agreements) – Enterprise/remote-site access
• OneNZ (New Zealand) – Satellite-to-mobile and remote-area connectivity
• T-Mobile US (United States) – Satellite-to-mobile text service integration
• Rogers Communications (Canada) – Satellite-to-mobile emergency coverage
• Elisa (Finland) – LEO backhaul for remote connectivity pilots
• Telikom Ltd (Papua New Guinea) – Rural connectivity projects
• FSM Telecommunications (Micronesia) – Island-nation coverage and disaster resilience
As LEO backhaul becomes established, mobile operators see it as a tool to extend coverage without long-haul fiber, while Starlink gains scale and recurring enterprise-grade channel access across multiple continents.
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