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Africa’s telecom operators and investors in
dilemma
From: Samuel Dowuona, GNA Special Correspondent, Cape Town,
South Africa
Cape Town, Sept. 3, GNA – Telecom operators and investors in
Africa face a dilemma, as to whether the expected level of
demand is worth the huge capital investment into the
submarine fibre optic cable currently available to the
continent.
A total of seven undersea fibre optic cables, with an
aggregate capacity of 10.94 terabytes (10,940 gigabytes),
have landing stations along the entire coast line around
Africa.
A panel of five telecom experts at the ongoing Telecom World
Africa 2009 in Cape Town, South Africa, noted on Wednesday
that even though the submarine fibre optic technology
promised faster speed communication at affordable rates for
Africans, there is a danger most of it will remain redundant
due to low demand.
They each pointed out that the consumption of fibre optics
technology was more in data and internet communication than
in voice, saying that the high level of illiteracy, low
access to computers, power supply bottlenecks and the
inability of carriers to pay for fibre optics raised
concerns about how much of fibre optics would be consumed on
the continent.
Submarine fibre optic cables landing in Africa include
SAT-3, 120 gigabytes, Main-one, 1.92 terabytes, Glo-one, 640
gigabytes, East African Submarine Cable System (EASSY), 1.3
terabytes, South Asia Telecom Cable (SEACOM), 1.2 terabytes,
The Eastern African Marine Systems (TEAMS), 640 gigabytes,
and the largest of them all, West Africa Cable System (WACS),
5.12 terabytes.
TEAMS, for instance, is being constructed at $82 million;
EASSY, $235 million; Main One, $240 million, SEACOM, $600
million, whiles WACS, SAT-3 and GLO1 are equally
multi-million dollar projects.
On the West Coast of Africa, SAT-3 (14,000km), WACS
(14,000km) and Main one (14,000 km) connect Europe to South
Africa, stretching from Portugal, with several landing
stations along the western coast of Africa down to the
south; Glo1 (9,500km) connects United Kingdom to Nigeria,
landing in Spain, Portugal, Morocco, Mauritania, Senegal and
Ghana.
To the East of Africa there is EASSY, which connects South
Africa to Sudan, with several landing stations along the
eastern coast; SEACOM (15,000km) connects France to India,
with at least seven landing stations in Africa, from South
Africa through the eastern coast to Egypt in the north.
TEAMS is 4,500km long and links Kenya with the United Arab
Emirates, with possible landing stations in Rwanda, Southern
Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania and Burundi.
Price per megabyte per month of bandwidth (capacity) differs
from one cable to the other; on SAT-3, for instance, a
megabyte of capacity costs between $4,500 and $12,000 per
month, 50 times higher than similar fibre optics capacity in
the United States of America.
Meanwhile it is projected, for instance, that data costs,
which now averaged between $5,000 and $7,000 per megabit of
bandwidth on satellite, would be reduced drastically to $500
per megabit on fibre optics, which would be more affordable
in Africa.
Ms. Lucy Quist, Head of Operations of Millicom International
Cellular, operators of Tigo, said there was need for
operators to create demand for the use of fibre optics,
saying that convergence technologies such voice over
internet protocol (VOIP) and Value Added Service (VAS) on
handsets were some of the ways demand could be created.
She also urged operators to collaborate with African
governments to raise the level of literacy on the continent
to empower a greater proportion of the African population to
be able to use modern technology extensively.
Dr. Angus Hay, Chief Technical Officer (CTO) of Neotel, said
even though convergence was a step in the right direction,
consumption on mobile handsets would not make much impact,
adding that the supply of affordable computers to a greater
number of Africans was the way forward.
“African governments also have to consider licensing more
carriers to buy more of the fibre optic and spread the
technology further inland,” he said.
Panellist also called for broadband internet connectivity
across the length and breadth of African states to create
the interest of African peoples in the internet.
Mr. Sarat Dutt Lallah, Chief Executive Officer of Mauritius
Telecoms, urged African telecom operators to continue to
focus on the basics; providing voice and SMS services to the
majority of their customers, saying that there was no need
for Africans to be carried away by modern telecommunications
technology at this time.
“African telecom operators must continue to focus on the
basics whiles we all make a gradual effort to bring along
the 300 million illiterate people on the continent with the
rest of us,” he said.
Mr. Ernest Ndukwe, Director General of the Nigerian
Communications Commission (NCC), said security was another
challenge facing African countries with regard to the
submarine fibre optic cables, adding that protection of the
cable path from saboteurs needed to be given much
consideration.
He said he was, however, confident that by the time all the
submarine cables would go live in Africa, there would be use
for them on the continent.
Currently, 50 per cent of SAT-3, 40 gigabytes of TEAMS and
only four per cent of SEACOM have gone live; Glo-1 will go
live later this year; Main-one is due in May 2010 and WACS
is due in 2011.
Meanwhile, business processes outsourcing (BPO) companies in
Ghana believe that huge redundant capacity of fibre optics
cable would boost the country’s chances at winning more
outsourcing jobs around the world.
GNA
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