Rocket Lab buys satellite company Iridium to go up against Starlink and Amazon's Leo
Key takeaways
- It wants its own satellite internet network.
- These days, it's not enough to own a company that sends things up into space; you also need to own the things you're sending up.
- If the name Iridium rings a distant bell, it's because it's the company Qualcomm partnered with to bring satellite texting to Android devices.
It wants its own satellite internet network.
Rocket Lab / Iridium. These days, it's not enough to own a company that sends things up into space; you also need to own the things you're sending up. Rocket Lab, one of the smaller names in the private spaceflight sector, has today announced it's buying Iridium Communications in a deal worth $8 billion. In essence, it's an attempt to buy the capacity it needs to go toe-to-toe with Space X's ever-growing Starlink network. If all the regulatory hurdles are cleared, Rocket Lab will own Iridium's network of 80 satellites, which connect some of the most remote locations on Earth, as well as its wireless spectrum.
If the name Iridium rings a distant bell, it's because it's the company Qualcomm partnered with to bring satellite texting to Android devices. Qualcomm dreamt up Snapdragon Satellite as an alternative to Apple's space-based emergency SOS feature. Sadly, the program was scuttled in 2023 after phone manufacturers turned their noses up at the plan, and the only mainstream handsets with satellite connectivity are the Pixel 9 series.