NEW DELHI: Telecom minister Jyotiraditya Scindia on Tuesday said Elon Musk-owned Starlink is yet to comply with security norms, and a licence for satellite communication services will be issued only after they meet all the requirements for services in India.
The satellite communication services major is in the process of completing all the requirements and will get a licence once they complete the process, the minister said.
“We are more than happy to give them (licence) if they (Starlink) comply with all the conditions. You have to look at it from a security perspective, making sure that all security concerns are addressed. When they do that we will be more than happy to give it. Obviously, they are in the process of doing it,” Scindia said.
He was replying to a question on the status of the licence for Starlink. At present, govt has issued a licence to Bharti Group-backed OneWeb and the Jio-SES joint venture Jio Satellite Communications. The two companies are yet to start their operations as they are waiting for spectrum allocation, for which pricing and rules are under process.
According to sources, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) is likely to finalise its recommendation on proposed rules related to spectrum allocation for satellite communications by Dec 15.
Trending
- The rise of SECI, the little-known miniratna PSU
- Kenya scraps $2.6 billion Adani deals in wake of indictment
- Sebi: No security deposits needed for public issues
- Ola Electric to lay off 500 staff in restructuring drive
- Gold prices surge Rs 1,400 to Rs 79,300 per 10 grams
- Equity investors lose Rs 5.27 lakh crore as domestic markets slump
- Sebi removes 1% security deposit requirement for public issues
- China announces policy measures to shield exports from Trump’s tariff threat
- Raghu Vamsi group invests Rs 300 crore in integrated facility in Hyderabad
- Who is Sagar Adani, accused of bribery and fraud charges along with Gautam Adani in the US?