Pacquiao, Space X execs meet; asks local IT providers to improve services

MANILA, Philippines — Presidential candidate Manny Pacquiao on Tuesday met with senior executives of Space X, an international tech giant owned by multi-billionaire Elon Musk. The senator said Space X is expressing interest in the country’s internet technology and telecommunications market.
Because of this, Pacquiao said telecommunications service providers in the Philippines should step up in improving the quality of their products.
Pacquiao, Space X execs meet; asks local IT providers to improve services
FILE PHOTO: Presidential candidate Manny Pacquiao (left) and Space X owner and multi-billionaire Elon Musk (right) INQUIRER FILES/AFP PHOTOS
MANILA, Philippines — Presidential candidate Manny Pacquiao on Tuesday met with senior executives of Space X, an international tech giant owned by multi-billionaire Elon Musk. The senator said Space X is expressing interest in the country’s internet technology and telecommunications market.
Because of this, Pacquiao said telecommunications service providers in the Philippines should step up in improving the quality of their products.
“’Yung Space X [meeting] para sa pagbilis ng internet signal sa bansa natin. Maganda naman ‘yan. Malaki ‘yung potential. Ang ganda ng magiging resulta nito. Kumbaga excited na siguro hindi lang ako pero pati ang sambayanang Pilipino na kahit saang sulok ng bansa, magkaroon tayo ng internet signal,” he said in a chance interview.
(The meeting is for improving the internet signal in the country. It’s good. It has big potential. It will have good results. I’m sure I’m not the only one excited, but also the Filipino people, in the prospect that all corners of the country will have an internet signal.)
Pacquiao noted that after President Rodrigo Duterte signed the Public Service Act, foreign telcos like Space X’s Starlink are now allowed to enter the Philippine IT market even without a partnership with a Filipino firm.
The new law classifies telecommunications, railways, expressways, airports, and shipping industries as public services, thereby allowing up to 100 percent foreign ownership in these sectors.
Pacquiao was accompanied by Senator Koko Pimentel in the meeting that was also attended by Space X Senior manager for foreign relations Rebecca Hunter and Philippine representative Ramon Garcia.
“I have no doubt that the entry of Space X into the Philippines would be a major game-changer, especially in the IT sector. We would definitely see a major upgrade to our IT infrastructure. There will be no more lags and no place unreachable,” Pacquiao said in a statement released later.
This is the second time Pacquiao met with Space X’s top executives. They first held a meeting met in January where they discussed the possibility of using low orbit satellites to provide cheap internet in the Philippines and the possibility of establishing a spaceship launchpad in the Philippines, Pacquiao said.
According to Pacquiao’s statement, Space X’s Starlink is the world’s one and only global broadband network provider. It hosts a constellation of multiple low orbit satellites that covers the entire globe and because of that, internet speed is dramatically faster, the coverage is limitless, and is insusceptible to weather conditions if compared with other broadband network systems, especially those being used by local internet service providers, it added.
“I also hope to see greater collaboration among global tech giants like Space X with our local IT service providers so that they too can keep up with the demands of the IT market. We all have to work together for a better life for all Filipinos,” he said.