The Satcom Duopoly Algeria Is Breaking Open
For more than two decades, satellite-based business connectivity in Algeria operated under a de facto duopoly. Algérie Télécom Satellite (ATS), the state-owned subsidiary, held the primary VSAT and GMPCS licenses. Djezzy, the mobile operator, operated VSAT services for business clients. Every enterprise needing satellite connectivity — whether an oil services company in Hassi Messaoud, a logistics operator in Tamanrasset, or a public hospital in Tébessa — went through one of these two players.
On April 9, 2026, ARPCE (the Regulatory Authority for Post and Electronic Communications) published a call for bids for two new licenses to establish and operate public electronic communications networks using non-geostationary orbit (NGSO) satellites. The legal basis is Law No. 18-04 of May 10, 2018, governing postal and electronic communications, and Executive Decree No. 01-124 of May 9, 2001. Applications required a DZD 1 million (approximately $7,500 USD) dossier fee payable to CPA Bank’s Hussein Dey branch. The withdrawal window for tender documents ran April 9-19, 2026, from ARPCE’s offices in Hussein Dey, Algiers.
The eligibility criteria are significant: the tender is open to existing Algerian VSAT licensees AND to operators owning global NGSO satellite constellations. That second category is where the market disruption potential sits — it directly signals to LEO (Low Earth Orbit) operators like Starlink (SpaceX), Eutelsat OneWeb, and Amazon’s Project Kuiper that Algeria is open to competition.
What NGSO Changes for Enterprise Connectivity
Traditional GEO (geostationary) satellite services — the basis of most VSAT deployments historically — operate from satellites positioned 35,786 km above the equator. The physics are unforgiving: round-trip signal latency runs 550-600 ms, making real-time applications like VoIP, video conferencing, and interactive cloud desktops impractical. NGSO satellites, particularly LEO constellations operating at 500-2,000 km altitude, reduce latency to 20-40 ms — comparable to a degraded terrestrial broadband connection rather than an unusable one.
For Algerian enterprises, this distinction matters acutely. Algeria’s fiber backbone (the RENAR national network) reaches major urban centers but leaves large swathes of the south, highlands, and rural areas underserved. According to Algeria’s National Digital Transformation Strategy (SNTN), the government’s stated goal includes universal broadband access by 2030. Satellite is the only technology that can realistically bridge the last-mile gap in remote regions within that timeframe.
The SNTN targets development of five or more national data centers and digitization of all public services by 2030. Both ambitions depend on connectivity reaching institutions — hospitals, dairas, schools, agricultural monitoring stations — that fiber will not reach before 2028 at the earliest. VSAT using NGSO fills that window.
Algerie Telecom’s public cloud market context also matters: Algeria’s public cloud market was valued at approximately $1.12 billion USD in 2025 and is projected to reach $1.96 billion by 2029 at ~15% CAGR (Statista). Cloud adoption cannot accelerate to those figures without solving connectivity in non-fiber zones.
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Three Enterprise Use Cases That VSAT Unlocks
Industrial remote sites: Algeria’s hydrocarbon sector, mining operations, and agricultural monitoring stations are concentrated in regions where fiber infrastructure is absent or years away. NGSO satellite connectivity enables real-time SCADA data transmission, cloud-based ERP access, and video surveillance without relying on constrained microwave links or expensive dedicated satellite circuits. Companies currently paying DZD 800,000-2,000,000 per month for managed GEO satellite circuits would gain competitive alternatives.
Public sector institutions: The SNTN digitization agenda requires connectivity for dairas (sub-prefecture offices), rural health centers, and schools across all 58 wilayas. Many facilities in wilayas like Illizi, Tindouf, and Tamanrasset cannot realistically receive fiber before 2030. NGSO satellite can provide the 50-100 Mbps symmetric connectivity these institutions need for e-government services, telemedicine platforms, and cloud-hosted student information systems.
Business continuity and redundancy: Even enterprises in fiber-covered urban areas benefit from satellite as a failover layer. A Tier-2 manufacturer in Sétif or a logistics hub in Oran reliant on cloud ERP cannot afford the revenue impact of fiber outages. Adding a managed VSAT circuit as secondary WAN path — something that becomes cost-feasible when competition drives prices down — is standard practice in markets with mature satellite markets. Algeria’s enterprise IT buyers have had no competitive option to price this correctly.
What Algerian IT Buyers Should Do Now
1. Map Your Organization’s Connectivity Blind Spots Before License Awards
The NGSO license process will take 12-24 months from tender close to commercial service launch — regulatory review, spectrum coordination, and equipment certification all create lead time. Use this window to audit every site your organization operates: which locations are fiber-connected, which rely on GEO satellite or 4G, and which have no redundancy at all. Build a prioritized connectivity requirement list with bandwidth needs and latency tolerances per site. When competitive NGSO offers arrive, you will negotiate from documented need, not reactive procurement.
2. Engage ARPCE’s Consultation Process Proactively
ARPCE is a consultative regulator — it publishes frameworks and accepts technical comments from industry stakeholders during licensing processes. Algerian enterprise associations (CAP, CIPA) and sector bodies in oil and gas, logistics, and banking should submit formal input on service quality minimums, pricing frameworks, and coverage obligations for licensed operators. Peer regulators in Morocco (ANRT) and Singapore (IMDA) have used mandatory coverage obligations to ensure satellite operators serve underserved regions, not just lucrative urban and industrial corridors.
3. Treat NGSO as a Cloud Connectivity Layer, Not a Replacement for Fiber
The architectural framing matters. NGSO satellite is best deployed as an SD-WAN overlay layer: primary connectivity via fiber or 4G/5G where available, satellite as automatic failover or supplementary capacity for bandwidth-intensive cloud workloads. Vendors like Cisco (Meraki), Fortinet, and Algerian managed service providers such as ICOSNET already offer SD-WAN frameworks. Design the connectivity architecture now so that onboarding a new satellite provider in 2027-2028 requires only a configuration change, not a forklift upgrade of edge networking equipment.
Where This Fits in Algeria’s 2026 Digital Infrastructure Calendar
The ARPCE satellite tender does not exist in isolation. It arrives as Algeria’s digital infrastructure agenda is accelerating on multiple fronts simultaneously: the Mohammadia and Blida data centers moving toward operational status, the SNTN framework publishing its 500-project slate, Algerie Telecom expanding its cloud platform, and 5G pilot deployments in Algiers. The satcom opening is the connectivity layer that makes those compute investments reach beyond the northern tier of wilayas.
For enterprise technology buyers, the next 18-24 months represent a structural window: connectivity economics are about to shift in Algeria’s favor for the first time in a decade. The companies and agencies that map their requirements now — and engage the regulatory process rather than wait passively for commercial offers — will enter 2028 with optimized, resilient, and cost-competitive cloud connectivity architectures. Those that wait will pay premium prices for initial-deployment contracts and start the architecture work late.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between VSAT and NGSO satellite connectivity?
VSAT (Very Small Aperture Terminal) is a technology for satellite broadband using dish antennas, historically deployed over GEO satellites at 35,786 km altitude with 550-600 ms latency. NGSO (Non-Geostationary Orbit) refers to satellite constellations at much lower altitudes (500-2,000 km for LEO), which reduces round-trip latency to 20-40 ms — making cloud applications, VoIP, and video conferencing practical. Algeria’s April 2026 ARPCE tender specifically targets NGSO operators, signaling an upgrade from legacy high-latency VSAT to modern low-latency satellite connectivity.
Which companies could receive the new Algerian NGSO satellite licenses?
The tender is open to two categories: existing Algerian VSAT licensees (including Algérie Télécom Satellite and Djezzy) and operators owning global NGSO satellite constellations. The second category targets international LEO operators like Starlink (SpaceX), Eutelsat OneWeb, and Amazon’s Project Kuiper. However, eligibility details and spectrum coordination requirements were not fully disclosed in the public tender documents, so final entrants will depend on ARPCE’s evaluation process over the next 12-24 months.
How does Algeria’s satellite market opening affect enterprise cloud adoption?
Algeria’s public cloud market is projected to grow from $1.12 billion in 2025 to $1.96 billion by 2029. A significant portion of that growth depends on connectivity reaching enterprises and public institutions outside fiber-covered zones. Competitive NGSO satellite services provide the 50-100 Mbps symmetric, low-latency connectivity required for cloud ERP, telemedicine, and e-government platforms. Without competitive satellite access, cloud adoption in Algeria’s southern wilayas, rural highlands, and industrial remote sites would remain constrained regardless of available compute infrastructure.
Sources & Further Reading
- Algeria Opens Tender for Two NGSO Satellite Licenses — Space in Africa
- Is Algeria About to Open Up Its Satcom Market? — Developing Telecoms
- Algeria Opens Satellite Market to Competition — Ecofin Agency
- Algeria Launches Tender for Two NGSO Satellite Licences — TechAfrica News
- ARPCE Official Press Release — arpce.dz
- Algeria Digital Economy Guide — U.S. Commercial Service / trade.gov
















