Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier said Kyiv had already "expressed interest" in how it could use Govsatcom — a pooled network of the EU's existing national government satellite capacity — and IRIS², a new constellation only set to be operational in the 2030s.
"The Commission will pursue its contacts with Ukraine in that regard," said Regnier.
French Renew MEP Christophe Grudler told the EU executive in a letter that it should urgently “assess all possible alternative satellite solutions that the EU could offer Ukraine” instead of Starlink. | Sebastien Bozon/Getty Images
Earlier this week, French Renew MEP Christophe Grudler told the EU executive in a letter that it should urgently “assess all possible alternative satellite solutions that the EU could offer Ukraine” instead of Starlink.
Grudler said expediting the deployment of Govsatcom this year by skipping the certification process could work as a stopgap solution while IRIS² is being developed. Regnier said the system offer Kyiv "precursor governmental services" without specifying what that would be in practice, or how soon it could be operational.
Other options would be sourcing commercial capacity from Eutelsat, Hispasat or SES satellites already in geostationary orbit or with the OneWeb constellation.
jphamlore on March 2nd, 2025 at 13:48 UTC »
I think Ukraine needs an alternative a lot sooner than the 2030s.
bpeden99 on March 2nd, 2025 at 13:36 UTC »
One weirdo shouldn't have the power to influence wars.
arumrunner on March 2nd, 2025 at 13:35 UTC »
How about this, ban Starlink in the EU. After all, you don't want all your data going to Putin