AT&T Says It's Pumping $250 Billion Into New Infrastructure Improvements

AT&T Says It's Pumping $250 Billion Into New Infrastructure Improvements

AT&T announced it will spend $250 billion from now until 2030 to beef up its fiber and wireless networks, expand rural coverage for its satellite partnership with AST SpaceMobile and make other improvements to its US connectivity offerings.

The company, which has 100 million customers and 110,000 employees in the United States, said the rollout is part of its 150th-anniversary celebration, marking Alexander Graham Bell's invention of the telephone.

John Stankey, the company's chairman and CEO, said, "Today, we're committing more than $250 billion to increase US connectivity competitiveness and expand access to AT&T's leading fiber and wireless networks -- the best way to get on the internet." 

He cited federal telecom policies being particularly "strong" at the moment as a reason AT&T is making the commitment. 

What does it mean for customers?

For those who use AT&T's wireless or fixed-line services, it sounds as if much of the investment will go toward updating and improving wireless and fiber networks, which could mean fewer dropped calls and faster broadband speeds.

AT&T said it will expand its rural coverage through its AST SpaceMobile partnership, an area that puts it in direct competition with services such as Elon Musk's Starlink.

Mahdi Eslamimehr, an executive vice president at Quandary Peak Research who closely follows the satellite communications industry, said that part of the announcement is especially notable.

"It aims to enable direct-to-cell satellite service, allowing ordinary smartphones to connect to low-Earth-orbit satellites using existing cellular spectrum," Eslamimehr said. "Satellites could fill the coverage gaps where building towers is difficult or uneconomical, remote highways, national parks, oceans and rural communities, effectively extending the reach of the traditional mobile network."

Given the other wireless improvements, that could mean fewer cell dead zones and more service in areas that previously weren't ideal for texting, calls or data service, such as remote areas like hiking trails in the mountains.

Other investments from AT&T

The company also said in its spending announcement that it'll continue building out FirstNet, an emergency network built specifically for first responders that includes built-in security controls.

Other spending mentioned included additional Wi-Fi personalization options for broadband customers and improvements to data for large events such as concerts. Some of the money will also be spent on workforce training, hiring more technicians and improving network security.

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