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SpaceX CEO Elon Musk Assures To Keep Funding Ukraine For Free

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk Assures To Keep Funding Ukraine For Free

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk assures that his company will "keep funding" the government of Ukraine for free even though Starlink is losing money. It has cost SpaceX USD 80 million so far to provide internet terminals and services to Ukraine. "We’ve also had to defend against cyber-attacks and jamming, which are getting harder," Musk said.


Image of the SpaceX CEO, Elon Musk in a black suit, tie, and white shirt with the Starlink internet


Ukraine Operation Has Cost SpaceX USD 80 Million

SpaceX has been sending Starlink internet terminals and providing services to Ukraine since the onset of the Russia-Ukraine war. At the request of the government of Ukraine, Musk supplied the country with Starlink internet terminals in February.

However, SpaceX’s Director of Government Sales reportedly sent a letter to the Pentagon in September, stating that the company is not "in a position to further donate terminals to Ukraine, or fund the existing terminals for an indefinite period." The Pentagon reportedly confirmed that they received correspondence from SpaceX about the funding of the Starlink satellite communications product in Ukraine.

Musk tweeted on Oct. 7, explaining that "only a small percentage" of the Starlink terminals and services have been paid in Ukraine. The SpaceX chief revealed:

"This operation has cost SpaceX USD 80M and will exceed USD 100M by the end of the year."

Replying to a question on Twitter about how much SpaceX is spending "for maintaining Starlink in Ukraine," Musk detailed: "In addition to terminals, we have to create, launch, maintain, replenish satellites and ground stations and pay Telcos for access to [the] internet via gateways. We’ve also had to defend against cyber-attacks and jamming, which are getting harder. Burn is approaching USD ~20M/month."

In a tweet on Oct. 9, Musk also shared that "There are ~25k terminals in Ukraine, but each terminal can be used to provide an internet uplink to a cell phone tower, so potentially several thousand people can be served by a single terminal."

Commenting on SpaceX being unable to keep providing free products and services to Ukraine, Twitter user and Tesla investor Sawyer Merritt opined, "SpaceX’s request is reasonable. Shouldn’t expect a private sector company to continue to fund this for free forever. Do Lockheed, Boeing, Northrop, etc., do their work for free? SpaceX was generous in donating what they did, and they’ll happily continue to manufacture terminals with government money."

However, some people slammed Musk over his company’s letter to the Pentagon. Then Musk tweeted on Saturday: "The hell with it... even though Starlink is still losing money and other companies are getting billions of taxpayer dollars, we’ll just keep funding the Ukraine government for free."

It was not immediately clear whether the Tesla CEO was being sarcastic or whether SpaceX intends to continue providing free products and services to Ukraine. Responding to a tweet about the move, Musk clarified, "We should still do good deeds."

On Oct. 14, Musk explained that there is a "big difference" between peacetime communications and warfront communications. "Starlink is [the] only communications system still working at warfront — others [are] all dead. Russia is actively trying to kill Starlink. To safeguard it, SpaceX has diverted massive resources toward defense. Even so, Starlink may still die, "he cautioned. The SpaceX boss described in a follow-up tweet: "Internet fiber, phone lines, cell towers, and other space-based communications in war areas have been destroyed. For now, Starlink is all that’s left.

Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Digital Transformation tweeted on Oct. 14: "Definitely, Elon Musk is among the world’s top private donors supporting Ukraine. Starlink is an essential element of our critical infrastructure." He also shared on Oct. 12:

"Over 100 cruise missiles attacked energy and communications infrastructure. But with Starlink, we quickly restored the connection in critical areas. Starlink continues to be an essential part of critical infrastructure."

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