EU Reserves Satellite Spectrum for European Firms, Risks Tension with U.S. Over Access

May 28, 2026
EU Reserves Satellite Spectrum for European Firms, Risks Tension with U.S. Over Access
  • The broader context includes tensions with the United States and past comments about U.S. threats related to EU behavior and dependency.

  • The package includes Annexes detailing the regulation and MSS authorisation framework that will accompany the proposal.

  • Executive Vice President Henna Virkkunen frames the move as a major advance for nationwide satellite and terrestrial connectivity, including parts without terrestrial networks, and for governmental services and critical communications.

  • The European Union plans to reserve two-thirds of the 2 GHz MSS satellite spectrum for European operators next year, with the remaining third open to non-European bidders such as Starlink or Amazon Leo.

  • The plan seeks to reshape legislation to bolster Europe’s tech sovereignty, subject to validation by EU member states and the European Parliament, and could strain transatlantic relations.

  • Brussels is expected to publish the formal proposal on a Wednesday afternoon, with final details likely shifting before the official announcement.

  • Tensions persist over market protections for digital companies, with the EU denying accusations of shielding its market from U.S. firms, in the context of broader digital regulation disputes.

  • The move could heighten transatlantic tensions over spectrum and space policy, with U.S. officials signaling possible reciprocal actions.

  • The overarching aim is to boost Europe’s technological sovereignty, security, and defence by ensuring secure, high-performing satellite services that strengthen competitiveness and critical communications.

  • Commissioner Virkkunen faces pressure to ensure European players benefit, with some sources suggesting she may prevail over other officials.

  • If adopted, measures would push for greater use of European vendors in public cloud and AI contracts, aligning with Made in Europe initiatives.

  • Brussels aims to boost competitiveness and security through new technological capabilities while navigating geopolitical dynamics and U.S. concerns about reduced access for American firms.

Summary based on 15 sources


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