Paratus and Telecom Namibia have signed an agreement to land the subsea cable, Equiano, in Namibia.
The cable will provide Namibian networks and their customers with greater capacity, enabling more product options that can stimulate economic growth and support a competitive telecommunication sector.
Paratus and Telecom Namibia have made a significant investment in landing the Equiano cable in Namibia, says Paratus group CEO Barney Harmse. “This is a major milestone for Paratus. We are honoured to be co-investing with Telecom Namibia on the Equiano subsea cable project because this matches our goals of delivering unlimited connectivity and building Africa’s quality network with all the Internet capacity it needs.”
In 2019, Google first announced its subsea cable project, Equiano, would connect Africa with Europe, running along the west coast of Africa, between Portugal and South Africa. Google’s Equiano cable incorporates new technology that enables approximately 20-times more network capacity than the last cable built to serve this region and provides flexibility to add and reallocate capacity in different locations as needed.
Paratus is a pan-African full-service network operator with operations in six SADC countries. It provides a satellite connectivity-focused service in 22 African countries and an additional 4 000 satellite connections across the continent.
The additional capacity offered by the Equiano cable, the largest on the African continent, will strengthen the Paratus SADC footprint and European network connection, as well as the operator’s long-term growth strategy.
Telecom Namibia CEO Dr Stanley Shanapinda comments: “This collaboration affirms that strategic partnerships between local network providers will greatly promote economic growth and digital transformation, while accelerating Namibia’s participation in the Fourth Industrial Revolution. We are very proud to be an investor in the Namibian branch.”
The increased capacity from the Equiano cable will provide Namibia with the necessary redundancy as a connectivity backup, a requirement that became evident when WACS & SAT3 subsea cable outages were experienced by various operators recently and which resulted in significant Internet downtime and adverse effects for those businesses in Namibia and the SADC that did not have redundant connectivity solutions.
“This is important for Namibia,” adds Shanapinda. “It is part of our ongoing commitment to connecting the Namibian people with faster, more reliable Internet connections. We will experience, first-hand, the positive impact this increased capacity and redundancy will have on our country and our economy.
“We have numerous points of presence (PoPs) internationally and we will continue to enhance routing diversity between these PoPs to minimise loss of traffic in the event of a failure on any of the submarine cables.
“It is crucial to highlight that Telecom Namibia does not only carry local traffic, but we ensure Internet connectivity for various landlocked countries in the SADC region.”
The Namibian landing station is scheduled to be completed in the latter part of 2021, with the Equiano cable expected to land in the second half of 2022.