In each market, Spacecoin will supply the core technology and satellite infrastructure, while local partners manage ground operations and user support.
Spacecoin has announced a series of strategic agreements with government authorities, telecommunications operators and industry partners across Africa and Asia to support real-world demonstrations of satellite internet services in Kenya, Nigeria, Indonesia and Cambodia. The initiatives are focused on practical deployment, with local partners managing ground operations and user support while Spacecoin supplies the satellite infrastructure and network technology.
The announcement follows Spacecoins launch of three additional satellites on November 28, 2025, from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The launch expanded the companys CTC-1 constellation and marked a step toward enabling real-time intersatellite communications and seamless handover capabilities.
The newly announced agreements include a transmission licence from the Communications Authority of Kenya to support satellite-based IoT monitoring and expand connectivity in underserved regions. In Nigeria, Spacecoin will continue work under its existing licence from the Nigerian Communications Commission, advancing efforts to deliver affordable, high-speed connectivity to rural communities.
In Asia, Spacecoin is collaborating with local partners and government agencies in Indonesia to address connectivity challenges across the countrys vast archipelago of more than 17,000 islands. In Cambodia, the company has entered into a partnership with MekongNet, one of the countrys largest internet service providers, to extend satellite-powered internet access to rural and underserved areas.
Spacecoin, which positions itself as the worlds first decentralised satellite network enabling permissionless global internet access through a blockchain-integrated infrastructure, said the agreements are intended to accelerate the development of decentralised communications systems in regions where terrestrial networks are constrained by cost and geography. Each partnership includes proof-of-concept demonstrations, with Spacecoin delivering the core satellite and network stack while working with local partners on operational execution and customer support.
The companys recent progress builds on the success of its earlier CTC-0 mission, which achieved the first end-to-end blockchain message transmission between Earth and space. The newly deployed CTC-1 satellites are expected to demonstrate real-time intersatellite communication and seamless handover, bringing Spacecoin closer to a fully operational, decentralised and open communications network.
Spacecoin said the agreements mark the start of a broader deployment phase, as interest grows among governments and private-sector organisations in emerging markets. With the CTC-1 constellation now in orbit and additional partnerships under development, the company aims to expand its footprint and play a central role in advancing affordable, open connectivity across regions where improved internet access could drive economic growth and social inclusion.

















































































