THISDAY

Coker: OADC Will Transform Digital Capabiliti­es across Africa

-

Managing Director, Open Access Data Centres (OADC), Dr. Ayotunde Coker, speaks to Emma Okonji on how the data centre company is transformi­ng digital capabiliti­es across African and the role of its parent company in restoring internet services to networks affected by the recent undersea cable cuts. Excerpts:

Since the establishm­ent of Open Access Data Centre to boost the African market, how has it transforme­d digital businesses in Nigeria and across other African countries?

Open Access Data Centres, which is part of the West Indian Ocean Cable Company (WIOCC) Group, was establishe­d in 2018 and since then we have been building up the data centres. The Lagos Data Centre in Lekki is our flagship data centre and that is where the Equiano subsea cable lands into and the cable has been live for over a year now. For the African market, we also built several data centres in different locations, including Durban and Johannesbu­rg in South Africa and another two in Cape Town in Sierra Leone. In South Africa, we have several Edge Data Centres located at key points of our data concentrat­ion that allows us to take content closer to the point of use. We also have data centres in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo and we are in partnershi­p with the local companies on ground.

In Kinshasa, we will be building the first carrier neutral ecosystem and in Nigeria, we have made tremendous progress in building the data centre ecosystem around the Equiano subsea cable. Apart from these data centres that we have establishe­d, we also worked on our value propositio­n called the Converged Open Digital Infrastruc­ture. Our parent company, WIOCC, started as a connectivi­ty data company and has built great assets of subsea cable capacities across Africa on the East and West Coast and it is a consortium partner on the Google Equiano subsea cable, which lands into our Lagos data centre location. So we have built very resilient open access infrastruc­ture, which makes us carrier of carriers because other carriers ride on our connectivi­ty. In South Africa, we built long distant networks that allow us to interconne­ct with others. In Nigeria, we are doing the same thing. So when you look at all these investment­s across Africa that I have mentioned, you will see that we are transformi­ng digital capabiliti­es across Africa, including Nigeria, thereby boosting economies and individual lives across African countries, and that has huge impact on county’s Gross Domestic Products (GDP). So we are helping to create broadband penetratio­n and adoption across Africa.

Africa has infrastruc­ture deficit that is affecting the growth of digital transforma­tion on the continent. How can your company address the deficit and the issue of barrier to connectivi­ty, given the fact that it supports digital network and infrastruc­ture?

We have built data centres across African countries, including Nigeria, and that is a start and the beginning of the growth of data centre infrastruc­ture that will help boost digital transforma­tion on the African continent. We are also looking at expanding the data centre infrastruc­ture to other African countries like Zambia, Ghana, Cote d’ Ivoire, Malawi among others. This is in addition to the fibre infrastruc­ture that we are already building across Africa. Through the fibre capacity from the undersea cable, we are able to connect Africa to other parts of the world with resilience capacities, and being Open Access Data Centres, we also work with Internet Exchange providers. That is the kind of investment­s we are making in Africa to bridge the existing infrastruc­ture gap in Africa. Open Access Data Centres is already changing the game by enabling investors to invest in infrastruc­tural developmen­t in Africa.

Recently there were multiple cuts on the submarine cable in the Atlantic Ocean around the Senegal and Cote d’ Ivoire axis, which caused severe internet access disruption­s to 13 African countries, including Nigeria. Can you share the role of your parent company, WIOCC in the restoratio­n of services?

Yes, our parent company, WIOCC, played a great role in the restoratio­n exercise that brought some forms of normalcy to networks. Since the subsea cable cuts, WIOCC has restored internet services to 35 networks across West Africa, amounting to 2.5 Terabytes capacity with over 100 links. What WIOCC did was to use its capacity on the Equiano subsea cable that was not affected by the cuts to restore services to other facilities and operators that suffered outages in Lagos and elsewhere on the continent. The quick response from WIOCC’s team, brought quick restoratio­n of services, and this shows the resilience of the capacity of our architectu­re that is seated on the Equiano cable, which helped in the level of restoratio­n achieved so far.

Given the scenario of the recent undersea cable cuts and the effect on internet access, what do you make of a situation where Africa is without internet connectivi­ty, and how do you imagine the lifestyle of Africa without internet access?

I cannot imagine what the life style of Africans will be without internet because everything revolves around internet connectivi­ty. Businesses and banking transactio­ns are all connected to the internet. So without internet, online businesses and banking transactio­ns will not be possible. The internet, which is driving digital transforma­tion, has become an integral part of our lives, and that is why we need resilience in our internet capacity. So we need locally based hyper-scale cloud capacity that will enable us as Africans to localise our internet access. We also need resilience in internatio­nal and local infrastruc­ture in Nigeria and the rest of Africa.

Africa maintains 17 per cent of global population growth, and generates only four per cent of global GDP and one per cent of global data centre capacity. What are some of the growth drivers that will boost cloud computing to drive growth and developmen­t in Africa?

At the World Bank Global Digital Summit in Washington DC recently, where I featured as one of the panelists, the global population growth and Africa’s contributi­on to global GDP growth was discussed. There is a huge gap between Africa and the world, in terms of GDP growth, which I termed as ‘prosperity gap’ that has to be closed. There is a whole range of things to be put in place to close the gap such as increased investment­s and promoting the ‘Ease of Doing Business’ but we also need to close the digital gap between Africa and the rest of the world in order to close the ‘prosperity gap’.

We need more investment­s in digital infrastruc­ture. So to boost cloud computing, Africa needs growth drivers like ubiquitous broadband penetratio­n and adoption. We also need affordable smartphone penetratio­n in Africa. From the GSMA 2023 analysis, which was presented at the Mobile World Congress this year, there was a significan­t decrease in 2.5G network and a significan­t increase in 3G network over the years, and nations are beginning to see increase in 4G and Long Term Evolution (LTE) networks.

So private organisati­ons are beginning to invest in digital infrastruc­ture to boost cloud computing that is driving developmen­t in Africa.

Given the fast spread of emerging technologi­es, how can Nigeria and other African countries take advantage of cloud technology to drive business growth and innovation?

Competitio­n and innovation in cloud technology will drive all of that once we have the underlying infrastruc­ture. A few years ago the hype was about Blockchain technology, which is embedded in some aspect of technology innovation­s that you are seeing today, which of course is a good thing. So it is not about the technology, but about the innovation that comes with the technology. A lot of that innovation seats around cloud technology and the cost to access to cloud technology is significan­tly lower, which means that it will drive adoption by many organisati­ons, including small businesses.

What makes Open Access Data Centres services unique from the services offered by other data centres in Nigeria?

Standard and our high quality Tier 111 Data Centre service offerings, stand us out among others. Again the speed of our service delivery has also been outstandin­g. We have open access data centres in Lagos that provides open access protected connectivi­ty around metro and internatio­nal networks and that is very unique, coupled with the resilience of our capacity. Again we will be building Edge Data Centres across Africa.

How will organisati­ons save cost and maintain zero downtime in business when using your data centre solutions?

It depends on the size of the organisati­on that is using our solutions. With the kind of ecosystem that we have, local cloud providers are connected to all the networks with a significan­t benefit to a multiple range of undersea services and connectivi­ty services, which is something they do not need to worry about. For larger organisati­ons they do not worry about connectivi­ty to their different branches as long as they are connected to our services.

We have a leverage of scale that allows us to get highly competitiv­e power as we want to get for the benefit of our customers. So organisati­ons can save a significan­t amount of their connectivi­ty cost, based on the connectivi­ty that we give organisato­ns from our Open Access Data Centres. It means the cost of switching for organisati­ons will become low, because we aggregate our services across a whole range of our clients.

Can you share details about the expansion plan of Open Access Data Centres and how such plan can impact on businesses?

Our expansion plan is great. In just one year, we are getting to about 1.3 mega watts of IT load capacity and currently we are breaking grounds on our hyper-scale expansion and we are adding 24 mega watts of hyper-scale AI-ready capacity to our data centre in Lekki, Lagos. We have four hectres of land and we are building on two hectres, while the remaining two hectres is reserved for other innovation­s that we have to unfold later in the area of solar and green energy.

One of the growth drivers for capacity building in Africa, is what is currently happening with Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI). So as AI innovation increases, organisati­ons will have access to our AI-Data Cenres and get all the benefits that come with it.

ITU Secretary General, Doreen Bogdan-Martin, recently raised the alarm that over 2.6 billion people globally do not have internet connectivi­ty. What do you make of that, given the fact that OADC has been building resilient capacities for data centre connectivi­ty?

Her concern is in line with the value propositio­n of Open Access Data Centres (OADC) in building broad range of resilient data centres across Africa. We have significan­t terrestria­l fibre connectivi­ty in Southern Africa and in Nigeria, we have long distanct network. We connect not just Africa to Africa, but from Africa to the rest of the world. So we are key player in the global ecosystem connectivi­ty. We are strong in connecting the unconnecte­d and we are enhancing the connectivi­ty of those already connected.

As the data centre infrastruc­ture arm of WIOCC, how has your parent company influenced the growth of data centre infrastruc­ture in Africa?

We are building core data centres across Africa and we are bringing digital ecosystem to Africa. Again we are the only data centre that is delivering contents through our Edge Data Centres across Africa and this has greatly influenced the growth of data centre infrastruc­ture in Africa.

Nigeria has several landing points of undersea cable at the shores of the country, but lacks ubiquitous broadband connectivi­ty at the hinterland­s, leading to high cost of internet connectivi­ty. How can Nigeria address this narrative?

There is a determinat­ion to move undersea fibre cable capacities from the sea shore to the hinterland­s. The plan is to get several kilometers of broadband connectivi­ty in the hinterland­s. On our own part, we are connected to every subsea cable that has landing points in Nigeria. The subsea cables that have landing points at the shores of Nigeria that re connected to our data dentures, include: MainOne, Glo1, SAT 3, ACE, and WACS submarine cables. We are also looking at collaborat­ion to move more capacities from the shores of the country to the hinterland­s that will drive broadband adoption and connectivi­ty in schools, hospitals, businesses, offices and in public places, and we are playing a big role in that area.

Energy is described as the lifeblood of data centres, but Nigeria lacks adequate supply of energy. How can data centres in Nigeria thrive with poor energy supply and high cost of diesel?

Africa and Nigeria are not the only ones faced with the challenges of poor energy supply and high cost of diesel in the digital space. It is an innovation challenge. So what we are doing as an organisati­on is to look at ways we can innovate to get the required energy that we need. Currently Africa is looking at three to four mega watts of energy demands and we need about 20 mega watts of IT load to deliver on the right capacity. We will continue to innovate to achieve the required energy capacity in Africa and we are doing that, but we are also looking at solar and hydro power to get enough access to sustainabl­e and renewable power.

 ?? ?? Coker
Coker

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria