The Chairman of
the African Space Agency Council, Tidiane Ouattara has called for unified
action on next-generation satellite internet technologies. Addressing
telecommunications regulators from across the continent at the FRATEL 2025
seminar held in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, the space leader framed low Earth orbit
(LEO) satellites as non-negotiable infrastructure for Africa's digital
future.
"Africa
cannot afford to be a spectator in the LEO revolution," declared Dr. Ouattara during the high-level gathering hosted by
Côte d'Ivoire's telecommunications regulator. His intervention highlighted the
paradox of satellite constellations like Starlink offering unprecedented
connectivity while operating under regulatory frameworks designed for legacy
systems. The solution, he argued, lies in continent-wide coordination to
modernize policies governing spectrum allocation, cybersecurity protocols, and
data sovereignty safeguards.
The African
Space Agency's vision positions LEO satellites as critical infrastructure for
bridging rural connectivity gaps and democratizing high-speed internet access.
Unlike traditional geostationary satellites, LEO constellations promise lower
latency and competitive pricing advantages that could transform education,
healthcare, and commerce in underserved regions. However, Dr. Ouattara
emphasized that realizing this potential requires proactive engagement between
governments and private operators to establish mutually beneficial operating
frameworks.
This strategic
appeal comes as multiple African nations grapple with balancing technological
openness with regulatory control. The Space Agency president's message cut
through these complexities with a simple directive: African regulators must
transition from reactive policymaking to collaborative design of
next-generation digital infrastructure. His remarks received strong endorsement
from FRATEL participants, including host organization ARTCI, who recognized the
urgency of harmonizing continental approaches to emerging space
technologies.

The Abidjan
discussions mark a turning point in Africa's digital sovereignty narrative –
one where space-based solutions move from theoretical potential to actionable
strategy. As the seminar concluded, Dr. Ouattara's challenge lingered: Will
African nations fragment into isolated regulatory silos, or unite to harness
LEO satellites as engines of inclusive growth? The answer may well determine
whether the continent leads or follows in the coming decade of global digital
transformation.
By: Nana Appiah Acquaye