$Delta Air Lines(DAL.US)$ held discussions with $Tesla(TSLA.US)$ CEO Elon Musk-owned SpaceX for its Starlink satellite internet service, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday, citing the airline CEO Ed Bastian.
What Happened: The Atlanta, Georgia-based airline aims to introduce Starlink's high-speed, satellite-based wireless internet on its planes.
The airline has also tested the offering. Bastian has in the past called for faster and free internet on flights. The airline ran a pilot program in 2019 offering free internet on some flights.
Starlink beams down high-speed internet via satellites in orbit to Earth, especially to remote areas, including those ravaged by war or natural calamity.
Why It Matters: Musk in June said SpaceX was in the process of getting the service certified with plane makers $Boeing(BA.US)$ and Airbus SE (OTC: EADSY), as they "serve the most number of people."
The billionaire entrepreneur had then revealed Starlink was being tested on $General Dynamics(GD.US)$ Gulfstream business jet.
Starlink has plans to launch 4,425 satellites in orbit by 2024. SpaceX is known to have launched over 2,000 satellites.