Business
Africa’s hunger for data sends satellites into orbit
Africa’s demand for bandwidth is doubling every year, outpacing the laying of terrestrial telecom fiber links and encouraging commercial satellite operators to launch more units into orbit. The arrival of submarine cables on Africa’s eastern shore just five years ago was largely expected to herald the end of satellite connections, which had been the region’s only link to the outside world for decades.
But the opposite is happening with Africa’s political geography – notably its many landlocked countries, such as Zambia, South Sudan and Rwanda – bringing undersea cable plans back to earth. “If you are to provide connectivity to the masses, fiber is not the way to do it. Do you think that it would make economical sense to take fibre to every village in Kenya?” said Ibrahima Guimba-Saidou, a senior executive for Africa at Luxembourg-based satellite operator SES SA .
He then advised, “Satellite is still around and will continue to be around because it’s the best medium to extend connectivity to the masses.” Furthermore, hundreds of millions of people on the continent still have no access to the Internet, he said. At least four satellites are planned for launch this year as countries with no access to the coast have yet to benefit from at least 10 undersea cables now serving the continent.
“There will be times when they compete, but such is the growth in demand for bandwidth that there is room for plenty of players,” said Mark Newman, chief research officer at industry research company Informa Telecoms & Media. Neman then added, “If you are in a landlocked country, it might well be that even though satellite would seem to be expensive compared to the cost of fiber capacity that lands on the coast somewhere, by the time you get that capacity in land, it’s no cheaper than satellite.”
SES, one of the world’s largest commercial satellite operators, expects to launch its Astra2G satellite in 2014 after sending three others dedicated to Africa into orbit in the last year. Nine of its 56 satellites orbiting the earth are allocated for Africa. Europe’s biggest satellite operator Eutelsat plans to fire off its tri-band EUTELSAT 3B this month after launching another to extend sub-Saharan Africa coverage in 2013.
MOBILES DRIVE DEMAND
The demand for Internet and data services in Africa has been driven by affordable mobile broadband connections. Mobile broadband users could grow by nearly eight times to 806 million by the end of 2018, according to Informa estimates. New services such as digital television, on-board Internet connection for passenger aircraft, and delivering education and health services electronically will also drive demand.
The private sector has several initiatives to extend the capacity from submarine cables inland using terrestrial cables, but until that bottleneck is addressed, satellite operators are innovating to plug that black hole. One operator, O3B, or Other 3 Billion, has launched four of the next-generation medium earth orbit (MEO) satellites and plans two other launches in 2014 to make an orbital constellation of 12.
