Nigeria Communications Week

IXPN Achieves Internet Traffic Milestone with 125Gbps in 2020

- Chike Onwuegbuch­i

INTERNET Exchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN) has achieved a milestone in its efforts to ensure that internet services providers in the country exchange their traffic locally by exchanging 125 Gbps traffic in 2020.

According to a report published by the Internet Society anchoring the African internet ecosystem, “IXPN grew from carrying just 300

Megabits per second (Mbps) to peak traffic of 125 Gbps in 2020, and cost savings increased 40 times to US$40million per year.

The latest report gave an update on a study published by the Internet Society in 2012 which examined two of Africa’s more advanced IXPs at the time – KIXP in Kenya, and IXPN in Nigeria.

The growth recorded by IXPN according to the report has put Nigeria in a better position than ever before to cope with and contribute to the digital revolution that COVID-19 has accelerate­d with internet becoming a lifeline for many people.

Michuki Mwangi, Senior Director, Internet Technology and Developmen­t for the Internet Society, said: “It’s clear Africa is ready to embrace the digital revolution to spur economic developmen­t. But reaching this goal will depend on our community of passionate people on the ground, policymake­rs, regulators and businesses embracing IXPs and working in collaborat­ion to create these essential local traffic anchors,”

The report commended Nigerian government for not only making it easier for different service providers to develop sub-marine cables, but also adopted data protection regulation­s that spurred confidence and attracted internatio­nal service providers.

Commenting on the report, Muhammed Rudman, managing director, IXPN, said: “We are indeed very excited about the recent ISOC report. It captured our growth and the impact we’ve made in the last eight years.

“The over 400 fold in growth of local traffic is significan­t, which translates to about 70 per cent traffic for

most of the service providers connected to IXPN. We hope to sustain this trajectory and to provide similar services to other regions within the country”.

He attributed the growth to level of awareness among Nigerians of the impact of local hosting to the economy, cost of internet as well as quality of service.

“A lot of Nigerians are now hosting their servers locally and we have attracted some of the big players in internet content into the country, such as Google, Facebook and Alkamire and presently we are trying to bring other bigger ones to the country.”

He urged smaller Internet service providers (ISPs) to connect to the IXPN in order to widely peer with other members and increase the efficiency of their interconne­ctions, disclosing that IXPN covers eight Point of Presence (POP) across Nigeria.

IXPN Point of Presence (POP) in Nigeria includes four in Lagos and one each in Abuja, Port Harcourt, Enugu and Kano. The Lagos POP connects both to each other and to the POP in the other four cities in an effort to extend connectivi­ty to the unserved and underserve­d,” he said.

IXPN in 2015 emerged as a regional exchange for West Africa with the support of the African Union Commission; which is aimed at reducing the latency and save costs by eliminatin­g internatio­nal transit through overseas carriers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria