Fibre optic sub-sea cable set to deliver a new phase of high capacity Internet capability to East Africa
London, 7 April, 2009 - SEACOM has signed a contract with Interoute to connect its 17,000 kilometre intercontinental submarine fibre optic network to Interoute's pan-European fibre optic network, providing East Africa with access to major business centres in Europe and throughout the rest of the world, plus Interoute's range of innovative wholesale and enterprise services. The agreement will allow Interoute and SEACOM to open up new opportunities for telecommunication companies and enterprises in the region, as well as supporting the growing demand for broadband. East Africa has seen a phenomenal increase in demand for Internet connectivity, with users rising by 1,062% from 2000 to 2008*.
The development of telecoms in East Africa has been restricted owing to its dependence on low capacity expensive satellite based connectivity. which suffered from quality issues and increased round trip delay not suitable for large streams of rich multimedia content The new subsea cable will radically change the economics of high capacity bandwidth for the East African telecoms industry, enabling businesses to get more capacity for less cost, and at a higher quality.
SEACOM's new fibre optic cable will run along the east coast of Africa, creating a digital super highway that links South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania and Kenya with Europe and South Asia. The cable will extend to Marseilles, where it will connect to Interoute's network providing a speed of light route to Europe, North America and the Middle East. The new subsea cable is scheduled for service in June 2009, and will offer 1.28 Tera-Bits Per Second of capacity, the equivalent of streaming approximately 1,600,000 simultaneous YouTube videos and will enable high definition TV, peer to peer networks, and IPTV, as well as supporting surging Internet demand.
Gareth Williams, CEO Interoute commented, "Interoute is proud to support SEACOM and the growing African market with high speed, high capacity connectivity. This project provides the vital last link for SEACOM in connecting East Africa to Europe and onto the rest of the world. When this cable goes live we are expecting to see a huge increase in the amount of content flowing between these two continents and I believe this cable will provide a crucial link in supporting economic growth in the region for many years to come.
Brian Herlihy, CEO SEACOM said, "SEACOM's agreement with Interoute enables the realization of connecting Africa to the global fibre optic networks. While SEACOM is the first cable to connect East Africa to today's global network, it alone cannot provide the interconnection required to deliver our customers world class services. Our agreement with Interoute and its partners extends SEACOM's capability to interconnect customers in Africa to not only anywhere in Europe but to anywhere in the world."
Alan Mauldin, TeleGeography Research analyst had this to say about the deal, "SEACOM have taken an excellent strategy by partnering with Interoute to link East Africa to the major European hubs. The seamless link between these networks will enable the introduction of a wide array of services between Africa and Europe and is good news for carriers and enterprises alike."
* Source: Internet World Stats, 21 December 2008, http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats1.htm#africa
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About Interoute
Interoute is the owner operator of Europe's most advanced and densely connected voice and data network, encompassing over 57,000 kms of lit fibre and 59 data centres. Its full-service next generation network serves more than 12,000 customers across a broad range of sectors from finance to retail and every major European incumbent, as well as the major operators of North America, East and South Asia, governments, universities and research agencies. These organisations find Interoute the ideal partner for hosting content, providing wholesale transit services, corporate access or creating new services. With established operations throughout mainland Europe, North America and Dubai Interoute also owns and operates dense city networks throughout Europe's major business centres. More than €1 billion in e-commerce transactions flows through its data centres each day, making Interoute a key part of Europe's Digital Supply Chain. www.interoute.com
About SEACOM
SEACOM, the underwater cable project, is privately funded and over three quarter African owned, assists communication carriers in south and east Africa through the sale of wholesale international capacity to global networks via India and Europe. The undersea fibre optic cable system will provide African retail carriers with equal and open access to inexpensive bandwidth, removing the international infrastructure bottleneck and supporting east and southern African economic growth. SEACOM will be the first cable to provide broadband to countries in east Africa which, at the moment, rely entirely on expensive satellite connections.
Within Africa, South Africa, Mozambique, Madagascar, Tanzania and Kenya are inter-connected via a protected ring structure. Additionally, a second express fibre pair is provided from South Africa to Kenya. These two fibre pairs have a combined capacity of 1280 Gbs. Express fibre pairs are also provided from Kenya to France into a PoP in Marseilles, with 640Gbs capacity, and from Tanzania to India into the PoP in Mumbai with 640Gbs capacity. SEACOM has procured fibre capacity from Marseilles to London as part of the SEACOM network. For further information please visit, www.seacom.mu