Russia confirmed it will launch its own satellite internet service commercially by 2027, pushing forward a project that has been in development for years and took on a new urgency after SpaceX shut down Starlink access for Russian military uses earlier this year. The plans were announced by the CEO of Iks Holding, Alexei Shelobkov at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum, on Friday.JOIN US ON TELEGRAMFollow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official. “The good news is that it is already being created. Satellites are already being launched,” Shelobkov said, “in the coming weeks, we will begin testing.” The announcement is framed as the most recent sign of Moscow’s urgency to build its own connectivity infrastructure, as SpaceX’s Starlink becomes an increasingly decisive factor in Russia’s war on Ukraine. “The Russians lost their ability to control the field,” a Ukrainian drone operator told BBC in the previous months, after Musk cut off Starlink access from Russian forces. Not having access to Starlink halted Russian capacity for offence by half, according to the same report. Bureau 1440, a part of Iks Holding, has launched the first 16 Rassvet satellites from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in March, marking a transition from experimental testing to early operational rollout. By comparison, SpaceX currently has over 10,000 satellites in orbit, and space analysts say Rassvet would need at least 250 satellites before it could function as a reliable communication system.