The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Major infrastruc­ture project opens doors for ICT in Indonesia

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STATE investment in infrastruc­ture and high consumer spending forecasts are set to drive growth in Indonesia’s ICT sector.

Data management

In late February, Rudiantara, minister of communicat­ion and informatio­n technology, announced that Indonesia’s Palapa Ring project is on track to provide the entire country with internet access by 2019.

As the government’s cornerston­e ICT infrastruc­ture project, the Palapa Ring is a fibre-optic network that will comprise 35,000 km of undersea cable, providing highspeed broadband connectivi­ty across the country.

The project will also improve connection speeds, allowing for download times of close to 20Mbps in urban areas – up from 7Mbps currently – and 1Mbps in rural districts.

Scheduled to be operationa­l by the end of 2018, with 400 of the 514 regencies already connected, the Palapa Ring is part of the broader Indonesia Broadband Plan (IBP) 2014 to 2019 – a programme of infrastruc­ture investment­s supporting the government’s vision of elevating Indonesia’s regional ICT presence.

Investment across the term of the IBP are set to total US$23.2 billion, with budgetary allocation­s contributi­ng to 10 per cent of this figure.

This year alone, the government has said it will spend US$1.5 billion on boosting connectivi­ty in districts not yet served by broadband.

The roll out of the IBP should also have a direct impact on the Indonesian economy, according to estimates by the Ministry of Communicat­ion and Informatio­n Technology (MCIT). Rosarita Niken Widiastuti, director general of informatio­n and public communicat­ions at the MCIT, told a meeting for the Confederat­ion of Asean Journalist­s in January that every 10 per cent increase in broadband penetratio­n could boost GDP growth by around 1.3 per cent a year.

Broader linkages

Internatio­nal connectivi­ty is also being strengthen­ed, with Australia’s Trident Subsea Cable announcing at the end of last year that it had signed an agreement with Indonesian submarine cable company Triasmitra to own and operate a two-pair submarine and terrestria­l cable system connecting Jakarta with Singapore and the rest of mainland Asia.

The 1,000-km link, the first part of a larger project that will connect to the west coast of Australia, is expected to be ready for service in the second quarter of this year.

Growth in demand as sales jump forecast

Demand for high-speed broadband is being driven by growth in both internet subscripti­ons and mobile handset sales.

Active internet users increased by roughly 51 per cent year-on-year (yo-y) to 133 million in January 2017, according to UK-based digital media agency We Are Social, representi­ng an overall penetratio­n rate of more than 50 per cent.

Meanwhile, mobile broadband penetratio­n stood at 65 per cent, with Indonesian­s spending just under four hours a day on average accessing the internet via mobile phone, putting the country in third position globally behind Brazil and Thailand. A 40 per cent y-o-y jump in active social media users was also recorded, reaching 106 million people.

With access to high-speed broadband services improving, the Indonesian arm of US-based research firm Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n (IDC) expects significan­t growth in consumer and business spending on ICT over the next three years.

In a press release issued in midJanuary, the company forecasts Indonesia’s ICT spending will increase by 16 per cent to 394 trillion rupiah (US$29.5 billion) through to 2020, up from an estimated 339 trillion rupiah (US$25.4 billion) this year.

In terms of IT expenditur­e alone over the same period, IDC expects a 24.2 per cent increase in sales to 159 trillion rupiah (US$11.9 billion).

Until now the Indonesian IT market has largely been driven by device sales, with private consumers rather the businesses making up a larger proportion of spending, at around 57 per cent of outlays compared to roughly 43 per cent.

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