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Google Begins Balloon-powered internet Service in Kenya

Google has launched a fleet of balloons set out to provide internet service to remote areas in Kenya. Google’s Project Loon and Telkom Kenya made this announcement for the commencement of the project.

The initiative by Google, is the first balloon-powered internet to launch in Africa, and the first non-emergency commercial deployment in the world, the two companies said.

The statement states that the project will use a fleet of 35 or more balloons floating 20 kilometers above ground, in constant motion in the stratosphere, to provide 4G LTE service spanning 50,000 square kilometers across central and western Kenya.

Also, the balloons are launched from locations in the United States and are being navigated to Kenya using wind currents. According to Project Loon, more balloons will be released as more experience in flying over Kenya is gained.

With the latest development, the technology will “offer connectivity to the many Kenyans who live in remote regions that are underserved or totally unserved, and as such remain disadvantaged,” Telkom Kenya’s CEO, Mugo Kibati said in the statement released Tuesday.

Project Loon balloons had previously been used to provide emergency connectivity in the aftermath of crises such as Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico when mobile networks went down.

The project, which had been in the works for years, was accelerated by the coronavirus pandemic and the global necessity to work online. The Loon project has the ability to connect “targeted communities to emergency services, as well as ensure enhanced and alternative communication options during this time,” said Loon Inc. CEO Alistair Westgarth in the statement.

The balloons are made from polyethylene sheets and are about the size of tennis courts.