As telecom operators embrace D2D satellite connectivity, the industry is moving closer to closing persistent coverage gaps, extending resilient mobile access to remote regions, and ensuring geography no longer determines access to connectivity, safety, or economic opportunity.
The announcement that AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon are joining forces to tackle rural dead zones through direct-to-device (D2D) satellite connectivity marks a major turning point for the telecom industry. The larger story, however, goes beyond a single announcement. The industry is recognizing what many in the sector have understood for years: terrestrial networks alone will never fully solve the digital divide.
For decades, telecom operators have done an impressive job expanding coverage across cities and densely populated areas. Yet large parts of the world, including rural communities, maritime zones, deserts, mountainous regions and remote industrial sites, remain outside reliable coverage areas. The issue has never really been about technology, it has been about economics.
Building and maintaining towers in sparsely populated regions is costly, and in many cases, the economics simply do not work. As a result, millions of people, even in highly developed countries, still face unreliable service or no connectivity at all. That gap matters more today than ever before.
Connectivity is no longer a luxury, it is basic infrastructure. If farmers cannot access real-time weather or logistics data, if emergency responders lose communications during a wildfire, or remote communities cannot access telemedicine or digital education, the consequences are significant. The digital divide is about much more than internet access. It affects economic opportunity, public safety and whether communities can fully participate in today’s digital world.
Where satellite D2D changes the equation
Satellite D2D is not designed to replace terrestrial mobile networks. It is designed to extend them. The goal is seamless standards-based connectivity that allows regular smartphones (i.e. iPhone, Google, Samsung) and cellular IoT devices to remain connected even when no terrestrial tower is nearby.
Recent announcements from U.S. carriers validate what satellite innovators have been building toward for years: satellite connectivity is becoming part of the mainstream telecom roadmap, not just a futuristic concept or an emergency-only service.
The satellite industry has been building toward this moment for years, creating infrastructure designed to connect underserved and hard-to-reach regions using low Earth orbit satellites that work directly with existing cellular standards. Last year, Europe saw its first emergency broadcast message sent directly from space to regular, unmodified smartphones, proving that satellite connectivity no longer needs specialized hardware. As satellite D2D connectivity scales, multi-band spectrum (L-band, S-band, C-band, IMT) capabilities will become increasingly important to improve reliability for consumers and give mobile carriers greater flexibility across coverage, capability and use cases.
One thing the industry still does not talk about enough is network resilience. Hurricanes, floods, earthquakes and wildfires regularly knock out terrestrial infrastructure at the exact moment people need connectivity the most. Satellite-based D2D networks can provide an additional layer of backup, helping keep communications running even when ground networks go down.
That kind of resilience is becoming increasingly important not just for operators, but also for governments, emergency response teams, and the communities they serve.
At the same time, the economics behind satellite infrastructure are changing fast. Space projects used to require huge budgets and years of deployment. Today, smaller satellites, software-defined payloads and standardized 5G NTN technologies are bringing costs down and speeding up deployment.
That shift is opening the door to faster innovation and making it easier to scale connectivity in places traditional networks have struggled to reach.
Closing the divide will require collaboration
The future will depend on satellite operators, mobile carriers, regulators and infrastructure providers working in tandem. The companies that succeed will be the ones that can make terrestrial and non-terrestrial networks work together seamlessly.
At the end of the day, consumers should not have to think about whether their signal is coming from a tower or a satellite. They should simply expect to be connected
The recent momentum around D2D connectivity also sends an important signal to regulators and policymakers. Spectrum coordination and international cooperation will be critical to making these networks work globally. The industry needs frameworks that encourage innovation while ensuring satellite and terrestrial systems can work side by side.
Most importantly, the industry needs to move with urgency. Too many people still lack reliable connectivity, while entire industries continue operating in coverage gaps. The technology to change that is finally here.
The question is no longer whether satellite D2D connectivity will become part of the telecom landscape. It is how quickly the industry can scale it, standardize it, and make it available to the people and places that need it the most.
The opportunity goes far beyond filling in coverage maps. It is about building a future where geography no longer determines who has access to connectivity or economic opportunity.
Omar Qaise is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Luxembourg-based satellite operator OQ Technology. He founded the company in 2016 with a vision to connect industrial assets and standard devices in remote areas by building a global 5G LEO satellite constellation. The company has become a major player in the ‘New Space’ industry and Europe’s leading 5G NB-IoT satellite operator.