Vodafone teams up with Amazon's satellites to connect masts in Europe and Africa


FILE PHOTO: People enter a Vodafone store in Sydney, Australia, September 29, 2025. REUTERS/Hollie Adams/File Photo

LONDON, March 2 (Reuters) - ⁠Mobile company Vodafone said on ⁠Monday it had signed a deal ‌with Amazon Leo, the U.S. company's low Earth orbit satellite network, to connect 4G and 5G ​mobile masts in remote areas ⁠in Europe and ⁠Africa.

Amazon Leo will offer connections of up ⁠to ‌1 Gbps for download and 400 Mbps for upload to ⁠link Vodafone's network to masts in hard-to-reach ​locations, ‌saving the expense of installing fibre, ⁠Vodafone said.

Vodafone ​will start using Amazon Leo to connect mobile base stations in Germany and ⁠other European countries this year ​before progressively rolling it out across Africa through its subsidiary Vodacom, it said.

Amazon Leo ⁠has over 200 satellites in orbit and hundreds more built and ready for launch, Vodafone said.

Vodafone separately plans to offer ​satellite connections to its ⁠customers using standard smartphones with its partner ​AST SpaceMobile, but ‌has yet to set a ​date for services to begin.

(Reporting by Paul SandleEditing by Peter Graff)

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