Sunday Williams
12 October 2008
Nigeria, Ghana and the rest of Africa are set to experience a major boost in internet access and a heavy reduction in tariffs with the commencement of the Main One Cable Project.
The Main-One-cable project is an ambitious under-sea fibre optic cable project that will extend from Portugal to the West and Southern coasts of Africa, respectively, with the first phase of the project spanning 6,900 kilometres, extending from Portugal to Nigeria and Ghana on the West Coast of Africa.
The second phase is expected to extend by another 6,000 kilometres to South Africa and Angola, using Dense Wave Multiplexing technology of 1.28 Terabits per second with two fibre pairs.
A statement from the company said the Main One cable project is designed to deliver more capacity to the region than any of the other existing or proposed under-sea fibre projects.
It said, "in what is clearly a major milestone especially for the West African sub-region, Main- One- Cable System, has acquired the first ever issued under-sea cable system landing licence in West Africa. In addition, the pioneering organisation has made the requisite contractual payments to Tyco Telecom-munications who will implement both phases of the project on a turnkey basis. Work has therefore begun on the massive intercontinental sub-marine fibre optic cable project."
It added that in addition to considerably enhancing broadband access, the Main One cable project will help crash internet tariffs significantly as well as provide open access to regional telecom operators and Internet Service Providers at rates that are less than twenty percent of current international bandwidth tariffs obtainable via SAT 3 or satellite service operators.
According to Funke Opeke, Main One Chief Executive Officer, "as a business championed by African entrepreneurs, Main One will encourage local content development via skills transfer of critical networking technologies. We will also enhance job creation with the location of the Global Network Operational Centre (GNOC) for the entire system in Nigeria and a cable station in Ghana".
Opeke reiterated that the massive cable project will provide a major boost to Internet access across the continent which currently stands at less than five percent, adding that it will help ease the difficulties of switching traffic between African countries, eliminating the inconveniences and added costs of first routing traffic to Europe.
She said, "With the support of individual inves-tors from within our region, private equity institutions, development finance institu-tions and a handful of African banks, the development of the project and execution of the contract by Tyco Tele-communications remains in line with our schedule for completion in May 2010."
"The Main One contract is now in force as scheduled and having completed the desk top study, we are working with our supplier and key partners to bring this privately owned cable project to a successful execution," she concluded.
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