HISPASAT provides free
connectivity and remote education by satellite
to 15 schools and rural communities in Honduras
April 21, 2021
The Minister of Education
of Honduras, Arnaldo Bueso, the Spanish
Ambassador in Honduras, Guillermo Kirkpatrick,
and HISPASAT’s Chief Commercial Officer, Ignacio
Sanchis, inaugurated yesterday the connectivity
and remote education service donated by the
Spanish satellite telecommunications operator of
the Red Eléctrica Group to 15 schools and rural
communities in the country with a visit to a
school in the department of Comayagua. This
donation, the result of public-private
cooperation, comes from an agreement with the
Secretary of Education of Honduras in the
framework of humanitarian aid that Spain has
earmarked for the Central American country to
alleviate the devastation caused by hurricanes
Eta and Iota at the end of 2020.
Specifically, HISPASAT has
provided all the equipment required to roll out
15 satellite hotspots located in different
departments in the country, as well as a remote
education solution that allows educational
contents to be downloaded and accessed on local
servers so that students can use them
effectively. This solution provides a WiFi
network in each school and also includes a
community WiFi hotspot that provides Internet
access to the residents of these rural
communities. HISPASAT is also care of the
installation and maintenance costs for this
service, which will last for nine months.
The devastation brought on
by last year’s hurricanes led to the evacuation
of half a million people and left 330,000 people
without communications and half the country’s
students without an Internet connection. In
disasters like these, satellite technology is a
key tool to speed up re-establishing
communications. The use of satellites is also
essential for training on tools and digital
skills in countries like Honduras, in which
rural schools frequently lack Internet access
through land-based or mobile networks.
Commitment to education in
Honduras
The Minister of Education,
Arnaldo Bueso, explained that the government of
Honduras is promoting major initiatives as part
of its commitment to quality education. “We are
united as a society and we are grateful for the
help from all the participants involved: The
central government, businesspeople, technical
teams, partners, civil society, fathers and
mothers, teachers, churches, local governments
and many others who, undoubtedly, are committed
to the future of thousands of students”, he
stated.
Furthermore, he showed his
appreciation to the Spanish Agency for
International Development Cooperation and to
HISPASAT for supporting these initiatives and
how students can now have the right to access to
quality education, especially certain remote
parts of the country where there is a lesser
degree of technological infrastructure. “Today
we continue to face major challenges, with a
raging pandemic and in-person education that is
becoming more difficult to maintain every day.
We want our students to stay in school and keep
studying to achieve their dreams and improve
their quality of life”, he explained.
For his part, Ambassador
Kirkpatrick stated: “The school closings in
Honduras due to the pandemic, aggravated by
hurricanes Eta and Iota, have highlighted the
need to promote digital education. That’s why we
need to overcome the digital divide, especially
in rural and remote areas of the country and to
modernize the educational systems, providing
training to educators, parents and students. The
Spanish Agency for International Development
Cooperation is promoting an educational project
that combines humanitarian action in the short
term, early recovery in the medium term and
long-term rebuilding with digital
transformation, including promoting
public-private partnerships to support
initiatives that make digital education
accessible for everyone without leaving anyone
behind.”
“HISPASAT is fully
committed to the role that satellites play in
addressing situations like the one in Honduras.
But we don’t want this connectivity solution to
be used only for re-establishing communications
in these 15 schools, we also want it to
contribute to effectively bridging the digital
divide in education, which is truly an essential
service”, added the company’s Chief Commercial
Officer, Ignacio Sanchis.
HISPASAT works in
collaboration with the Spanish Agency for
International Development Cooperation (AECID) on
a variety of initiatives to provide satellite
connectivity to schools and rural communities in
Latin America and to promote quality education
in remote, disadvantaged areas.