Business Day

Paratus launches fibre network

- Mudiwa Gavaza

Namibian telecom operator Paratus has launched a fibre network route from Johannesbu­rg to Europe, making use of Google’s Equiano undersea cable infrastruc­ture.

The company aims to position itself as an alternativ­e for local network operators to route their internet traffic in and out of SA after a spate of undersea cable breaks that negatively affected service to the country in recent months.

This comes as the telecoms group has just completed a 1,890km fibre link between Johannesbu­rg and Swakopmund, Namibia, via Botswana. This connects to the Equiano subsea cable that runs from Namibia to Lisbon and on to London and the rest of Europe.

Paratus has operationa­l teams in Angola, Botswana, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Mozambique, Namibia, SA and Zambia.

Its extended network provides a satellite connectivi­ty service in more than 35 African countries. The group also has points of presence in Europe, the UK and the US.

The company says latency on the new route is just 123 millisecon­ds, using Infinera FlexILS and GX Series DWDM equipment, and can support wavelength­s of up to 800Gb. Latency refers to the speed of sending and receiving messages or data across a telecom network.

MITIGATION

The company said the route offered network operators “an unequalled opportunit­y to elevate their capacity and redundancy where resilience and high-speed performanc­e come as standard. This guarantees smooth data flow and less interrupti­on of service”.

Group chief commercial officer Martin Cox said: “As a steadfast partner with pan-African expertise, we offer unrivalled wholesale capacity solutions for network operators.”

Paratus is the landing partner for Equiano in Namibia, which offers an alternativ­e route out of SA and mitigates possible fibre outages between Johannesbu­rg and Cape Town.

In September 2022, Equiano — which Google touted as Africa’s highest-capacity subsea internet cable at the time — landed in SA. Google is the main funder of the cable, which runs from Portugal along the west coast of Africa to Cape Town. Its arrival in SA was in partnershi­p with Telkom’s infrastruc­ture unit, Openserve.

Undersea cable operators specialise in providing open access to inland fibre providers such as Paratus or Openserve that give open access networks to internet service providers. Service providers such as WebAfrica tend to not have their own fibre assets, relying on network operators such as Paratus to reach homes and businesses.

Mobile operators also make use of the same infrastruc­ture to connect to the rest of the world.

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