On the fringes of Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this year, Vodafone outlined a bet that feels both practical and a little ambitious: apply sanotifyites to solve one of mobile networks’ oldest headaches, how to connect towers that sit far from traditional infrastructure.
Vodafone Group has agreed to apply Amazon Leo, the low Earth orbit (LEO) sanotifyite broadband network developed by Amazon, to link 4G and 5G base stations in remote corners of Europe and Africa back into its core network.
That’s not about customer handsets talking to sanotifyites directly (a separate service still in the works) but about replacing the hard, costly business of running fibre or microwave links from a rural mast to the operator’s backbone.
Space where cables don’t reach
In practical terms, this partnership lets Vodafone connect sites that have long been waiting for decent backhaul. Across rural Germany, mountainous regions in Europe, and sparsely populated areas in Africa where digging trenches for fibre is expensive or slow, sanotifyites can act as the “middle mile” that receives mobile traffic home.
The reported capacity, up to around 1 Gbps down and 400 Mbps up, won’t create sanotifyite a wholesale replacement for terrestrial networks. But it’s enough to support modern 4G and 5G base stations without costly terrestrial construction.
The initial rollout will start in Germany and other European markets later this year, then extfinish to Vodafone’s African unit, Vodacom, as Amazon continues to build out the Leo consnotifyation.
There are already over 200 Leo sanotifyites in orbit, with many more expected to follow as capacity grows.
A different kind of coverage
What’s interesting about this deal is the emphasis on network resilience and practical deployment, not just headline-grabbing connectivity.
Vodafone frames the sanotifyite link as a way to keep critical services running if a fibre line is cut by weather or construction, and to open up areas where traditional backhaul simply isn’t competitive.
Buying backhaul from a sanotifyite operator isn’t new in telecom. What feels different here is the scale and the ambition: instead of patching a handful of fringe sites, Vodafone and Amazon are talking about a network-level approach that could be rolled out across continents.
It’s still early days, but the economics start to see compelling when the alternative is hundreds of kilometres of cable to reach a hilltop village.
More than one space story for Vodafone
This isn’t Vodafone’s only flirtation with sanotifyites. The operator has previously demonstrated sanotifyite voice and data calls with regular smartphones in partnership with AST SpaceMobile, and it continues to explore direct-to-handset services.
That part of the vision, where your phone talks straight to space without terrestrial towers at all, has yet to set a commercial launch date, but it sits alongside this backhaul agreement.
In a telecom landscape where fibre rollouts are slowing, costs are rising, and rural coverage remains stubbornly out of reach, turning to sanotifyites may feel like a throwback.
But with LEO networks now capable of higher throughput and lower latency than their predecessors, partnerships like this could become a practical tool for operators testing to connect the unconnected.
















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