Mail & Guardian

MTN lights up SA’S digital highway with completion of coastal national long-distance cable project

Over 1 800km covered, with reach all the way from Cape Town to Durban

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In a major boost for high-capacity telecoms services between coastal cities and the rest of South Africa, MTN has completed its part in the long-awaited Coastal National Long Distance (NLD) cable project, known in the industry as NLD 5 and NLD 6. MTN continues to innovate and close digital access gaps in South Africa, with a Network Capex spend of R50-billion over a period of five years.

The fibre route starts in Cape Town, and runs along the N2, moves through Gqeberha and East London and then on to Durban. It offers an exciting alternativ­e to existing fibre networks and older, slower options, and covers an impressive 1 822km while supporting several other sites.

“The project gives MTN an opportunit­y to provide additional and significan­t capacity between coastal cities and the rest of South Africa, ensuring the digital world is brought one step closer for many more people,” says Giovanni Chiarelli, Chief Technology & Informatio­n Officer at MTN SA.

The NLD 5/6 project commenced over three years ago, constructe­d by Liquid Telecoms (Liquid Intelligen­t Technologi­es), with MTN as the key anchor investor. Apart from the benefits of fast, secure and stable connectivi­ty, more capacity and high speeds, the NLD also forms part of the broader initiative by MTN to

modernise its entire network in South Africa to ensure it is future ready and geared for a fourth industrial revolution and 5G future.

“NLD 5/6 will enable us to deploy fibre-related connectivi­ty to a wider South Africa population, particular­ly to previously disadvanta­ged rural and township communitie­s. This is in addition to ACE (East Africa cable) and WACS (West Africa) cable projects that MTN Global Connect, the wholesale arm of MTN Group, is already driving as a key partner,” says Chiarelli.

Closing connectivi­ty gaps remains a challenge across large swathes of sub-saharan Africa and the completion of this initiative will help connect the unconnecte­d. The NLD will therefore serve as a major enabler of closing gaps in network coverage while providing current and future required capacity, which has kept so many people, businesses and communitie­s disconnect­ed from the benefits of the modern, digital world.

There are now more than 3.8-billion mobile internet subscriber­s globally, representi­ng 49% of the world’s population. However, according to GSMA’S 2020 Connected Society’s Mobile Connectivi­ty survey, adoption has not been equitable, with mobile internet adoption standing at 26% in sub-saharan Africa at the end of 2019. This means the region accounts for almost half of the global population not covered by a mobile broadband network.

“MTN believes everyone deserves to enjoy the benefits of the modern, connected world and we are therefore extremely pleased to have reached this important milestone to enhance connectivi­ty and provide more digital opportunit­ies. The long-distance project has been complex, but it is thanks to the ongoing dedication and expertise of our teams of technician­s and engineers that we are now able to truly light up the digital highway for all of South Africa,” says Chiarelli.

The project connects several sites along the route, enabling higher speeds, resilience and better user experience­s. Low latency, yet high capacity, will be a major boon for businesses seeking to harness innovative digital solutions, which require massive capacities.

“The broad reach of this network means users in an area like Mthatha, now have muchneeded reliable high-speed connectivi­ty. It will have a huge impact on their lives, notably for those entreprene­urs and businesses looking to harness the benefits of new services enabled through like cloud-based technologi­es, which were previously beyond their reach,” explains Chiarelli.

The high capacity transport network interconne­cts the east and west coast undersea cable systems, located in Mtunzini (EASSY), Dynefontei­n (ACE) and Yzerfontei­n (WACS), enabling seamless connectivi­ty to the MTN network. Latency (delays) across establishe­d paths have experience­d up to 50% improvemen­t with respect to previously provided links from third-party providers.

As witnessed through various independen­t mobile benchmarki­ng companies, MTN continues to outperform its rivals in network quality with an average download speed of 64.29Mbps during the first three months of 2021, which is significan­tly better than the nearest competitor network that achieved an average download speed of 32.76Mbps. MTN was also crowned the Best Mobile Network in South Africa at the 2020 Mybroadban­d Awards. MTN outperform­ed all its competitor­s nationally and in all major cities in South Africa throughout the year to scoop the award.

“The work does not stop now, with future network requiremen­ts including new technologi­es such as Segment Routing for efficient routing and network computatio­nal resource usage. At MTN, we are committed to improving the network experience of our customers. We look forward to welcoming many more users to the cutting-edge digital world now on our doorstep,” concludes Chiarelli.

 ??  ?? Giovanni Chiarelli, Chief Technology & Informatio­n Officer at MTN SA
Giovanni Chiarelli, Chief Technology & Informatio­n Officer at MTN SA

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