The pan-African telco, Paratus Group, announced it is providing LEO satellite solutions to clients in South Africa, Botswana, Mozambique, and Zambia.
Speaking at the Atlantic Convergence conference in Lisbon this week, Rolf Mendelsohn, chief technical officer of the Paratus Group, says: “We have always known that reliable, fast, and secure connectivity will be the key to unlocking the enormous potential that exists in Africa.
“With LEO satellite technology, we are broadening our network offerings even further to provide unlimited connectivity for our current markets, with plans to expand across the continent.”
Through its partnership agreements with global low earth orbit (LEO) satellite operators, Paratus is positioning itself to offer an extensive LEO satellite network across Africa as regulatory and satellite coverage hurdles are overcome.
Paratus already owns and runs an extensive V-SAT network with teleport facilities in Angola, Botswana Namibia and South Africa. With the addition of LEO satellite technology, Paratus is offering an unmatched one-stop solution for enterprises and institutions that not only need high-speed capacity and connectivity in these countries – even in the most remote and offshore areas – but to anywhere in the world.
This is particularly significant for the retail, healthcare, education, mining and oil and gas sectors.
“Paratus has already launched Starlink services in Botswana, Mozambique and Zambia,” Mendelsohn says. “We are actively working on expanding our LEO offerings to more African countries as regulatory environments and satellite coverage permit.
“Our service is unique because we carry stock, handle the installations and have technical teams in all regions that provide 24/7 support. And, through our extensive high-quality network across Africa, Paratus can provide tailored packages to any business needing robust, stable and reliable connections to anywhere in the world.
“We launched the fastest express route from Johannesburg to Europe recently; we have created an east-west African fiber route from Maputo to Swakopmund; we landed the Google subsea Equiano cable in Namibia; and have built 4 Tier III by design data centres in Africa,” he adds.
Paratus Group has established partnerships with global LEO satellite operators positioning itself as a key African partner. Mendelsohn adds: “Paratus was born in Africa. We are rooted in Africa, and we understand what the market needs. This is why we have invested so heavily in our own infrastructure. With LEO satellite connectivity complementing our extensive African network, Paratus is now the go-to partner for any enterprise that needs reliable connectivity in the most remote places. High quality connectivity – be that through fiber, wireless or satellite services – is championing Africa’s future and championing anyone in the world that wants to connect with Africa.”