A European satellite powerhouse with deep French and U.K. government ties is making a bold play for Canada’s defense sector, pitching a $250 million “sovereign” broadband network as a secure alternative to Elon Musk’s Starlink amid escalating concerns over U.S. tech dependencies in Arctic operations.
Eutelsat Group, the Paris-based operator whose largest shareholder is the French government alongside stakes from the U.K. and India’s Bharti Space Ltd., has proposed a dedicated low-Earth orbit (LEO) constellation slice for the Canadian military, offering full control over communications without the risks tied to a single individual’s whims.
The initiative, channeled through a French Ministry of Defence program, would deliver immediate secure broadband coverage across Canada’s Far North, supporting NORAD modernization, over-the-horizon radar sites, and expanding defense footprints in the Arctic. Discussions kicked off last year when French President Emmanuel Macron floated the idea to Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Alberta, with Eutelsat already providing services to Canadian forces in Latvia and holding major U.S. Pentagon contracts for aviation and ISR connectivity.
The pitch emphasizes “sovereign capacity,” where Canada would own all allocated bandwidth in key regions, sidestepping vulnerabilities exposed by Starlink’s role in global conflicts. In 2022, Musk directed Starlink to disable service during a Ukrainian counteroffensive, disrupting operations in areas like Kherson and affecting over 100 terminals—a move that highlighted the perils of relying on privately controlled infrastructure. More recently, Musk’s appointment as head of the U.S.
Department of Government Efficiency under President Trump’s second administration has amplified scrutiny, prompting Ontario to scrap a $100 million Starlink deal for northern communities amid U.S. tariffs and geopolitical tensions. Eutelsat’s own $55 million U.S. Department of Defence contract lapsed in late 2025, attributed by CFO Christophe Caudrelier to the new administration’s geographic reprioritization and budget cuts.
“What we can provide for Canada is what we call a sovereign capacity capability where Canada would actually own all of our capacity in the Far North or wherever they require it,” said David van Dyke, Eutelsat’s general manager for Canada, in an interview. “We also give them the ability to not be under the control of a singular individual who could decide to disconnect the service for political or other reasons.” Van Dyke added that the setup could go live immediately, partnering with trusted allies to bolster Canada’s northern defenses.
This comes as Canada deepens its domestic satellite ambitions. In mid-December 2025, the government unveiled a strategic tie-up with Ottawa-based Telesat Corporation and MDA Space to advance military satellite communications via Telesat’s Lightspeed LEO constellation, aimed at high-speed broadband for defense needs. Carney’s initial query on the Eutelsat proposal reportedly centered on its impact on Telesat, signaling a balancing act between foreign alliances and homegrown tech.
Starlink, with hundreds of thousands of Canadian subscribers and dominance in remote broadband, remains a go-to for the Far North but faces growing pushback over Musk’s influence.
The satellite broadband race is intensifying, with players like Amazon’s Project Kuiper and China’s emerging constellations vying for global slices, while sovereign-focused bids like Eutelsat’s highlight a shift toward diversified, geopolitically resilient networks. As Arctic tensions rise with climate-driven accessibility and resource scrambles, Canada’s choice could reshape alliances in space tech, potentially influencing how nations hedge against U.S.-centric dominance in the stars.

