By | Destiny Young
Nigeria’s satellite internet market is opening to more competition after the Nigerian Communications Commission, NCC, issued seven-year satellite permits to Amazon’s Kuiper Systems, Israel’s NSLComm’s BeetleSat and Germany-based Satelio IoT Services. Reuters reported that the approvals place the new entrants alongside SpaceX as operators cleared to expand space-based broadband services in the country.
The NCC said the permits were issued under its commercial satellite communications guidelines, the framework the regulator uses for satellite communications services in Nigeria. The commission has said the licensing regime is designed to support investment and orderly development in the sector.

Reuters reported that the approvals form part of the regulator’s push to open Nigeria, Africa’s largest telecoms market, to next-generation non-geostationary satellite systems. That matters because it broadens the range of providers that can support broadband access in hard-to-reach areas, enterprise connectivity and specialised machine-to-machine services.
Under the approvals, Kuiper Systems received a seven-year licence to provide Ka-band services in Nigeria through Amazon’s Project Kuiper constellation from February 2026 to February 2033. Reuters also reported that BeetleSat secured similar clearance for its planned 264-satellite network, while Satelio IoT was approved for its 491-satellite IoT system, although only one satellite is currently in orbit.
The development gives Nigeria a wider field of satellite operators at a time when governments, businesses and telecoms users are looking for more resilient connectivity options. Beyond consumer internet access, the expansion could support logistics, agriculture, maritime operations, remote industrial sites and other use cases that depend on coverage outside fibre and tower footprints. This wider use case is an inference from the types of satellite and IoT services described by the NCC and Reuters.
For Nigeria, the broader significance is competition. More licensed operators could help improve service options, widen rural and remote access, and deepen the role of satellite systems in the country’s digital infrastructure. The immediate test, however, will be how quickly the newly approved operators deploy services and whether pricing, device access and regulatory execution support wider adoption.










