Transcript What is ICT

UbuntuNet Alliance
www.ubuntunet.net
Creating the
Human and Infrastructure
Research And Education Networks
In Africa
F F Tusubira, CEO - [email protected]
Headlines..
• African Universities in the UbuntuNet
membership region currently spend
$1.2million per month on less than
700Mbps;
• In the USA, the price is about 1% of prices
in Africa: $1.2million would buy at least
60Gbps
• The challenge is not lack funds – it is the
cost of access.
Our thesis..
• “Improved and affordable regional and
international connectivity will enable
African researchers to generate a
proportionate amount of intellectual
property goods to achieve parity with the
rest of the world”
• Hence CORENA: Consolidating Research
and Education Networking in Africa
CORENA
• Overall goal : Enable an environment… African
Education and Research Institutions can exploit
their full potential.. contributing to national and
international human development…increasing
contribution to, and share in intellectual property
output… effective national, regional and
international collaboration.
• Principle Objective: Integration of African
institutions into the global research and
education community through provision of intraAfrican connectivity and enabling access to
sufficient and affordable bandwidth.
Key Triggers and Growth
• Studies brought to light the reservoir of
unutilised optical fibre capacity in Africa.
• A new wave of liberalisation created
opportunities for new and existing fibre to come
on the market.
• The Plan for the East African Submarine
System, or EASSy.
Ubuntu: “I Am because We Are”
UbuntuNet Alliance
Geographical coverage in perspective
There is still a lot to do..
Formal REN, advanced network and
sufficient bandwidth: NONE
Formal REN and underlying operational
infrastructure: Kenya, South Africa, Sudan
Formal REN but no underlying operational
infrastructure: Rwanda, Tanzania, Zambia,
DRC, Uganda, Malawi, Mozambique
REN in formation: Botswana, Swaziland,
Lesotho, Ethiopia, Namibia, Somalia, Eritrea
Opportunities
• Growing awareness in Africa of the importance
of increased investment in higher education
• Increasing liberalisation of the telecom sector
• Investment into national fibre backbones
• Increasing intra/extra research linkages among
African and non-African universities
• The African pioneers
• The number of high capacity marine optical
fibres planned to land on the African coast
starting 2009; and associated backhauls
Opportunity: Submarine cable initiatives
Legend
Cable
SAT-3 (WASC-SAFE)
2003. Operator Club
SEACOM (E. Africa to London)
2009. Investors. Open access.
TEAMS (Mombasa to Fujairah)
2009. Kenyan Govt.
EASSy (E. Africa to Port Sudan)
2010. Operator consortium
WACS (Cape Town to London)
2010. Operator consortium
Map: Thanks to Steve Song.
http://www.manypossibilities.net
MaIN OnE (W. Africa to Portugal)
2010. Investors. Open access
Phase 2: Luanda, Cape Town
EASSy: East African Backhaul
•
•
Source: WIOCC
4,300km fibre ring
Completion due by end 2009
Telkom Kenya; UTL; MTN
Uganda; MTN Rwanda;
RwandaTel; Burundi; TTCL
EASSy
EASSy: Northern Backhaul
Existing Optic Fiber
New Fiber
•
SEAMEWE3
Northern backhaul essentially
complete
Port Sudan
EASSy
Source: WIOCC
12
EASSy: Southern Backhaul
• Network linking Namibia and Zambia is
complete
• Construction commenced by ZamTel linking
Botswana, Zimbabwe, Namibia, Malawi, Congo
and Tanzania completion in the fourth quarter of
2009
EASSy
SAT-3 / WASC
TdM
FSS
Existing Fiber
New Fiber
SAFE
Source: WIOCC
Challenges (1)
• Shortage of skilled human resource
• Limited understanding of the multiple roles and
benefits of research and education networks.
• Disabling Policy and regulatory environments:
– Slow reforms in the communication sector
– Inadequate access to backbone infrastructure
at affordable prices
– Inadequate policies and regulation with
regards to ownership and access to essential
infrastructure
Challenges (2)
• Seeking individual advantage by member
NRENs
• Competition from and cherry picking by service
providers.
• Weak Financial Base
Strategic Priorities (2009 – 2013)
•
•
•
•
NRENs development in Africa;
Sufficiency and affordability of bandwidth;
Institutional sustainability of UbuntuNet;
Improved national policy and regulatory
environments that enable REN activities.
• Increased interconnections among NRENs within
Africa and to the rest of the world.
• Increased and effective support for regional
content (including research) networks.
Addressing challenges (1):
The Huge Continent
• Recognising the need to work through
partnerships in a mutually supportive
environment, based on common
architecture and/or interface standards;
&Cluster approach; The Association of
African Universities is a key continental
policy level partner.
UbuntuNet Backbone Vision
Addressing challenges (2) –
Limited NREN Activity
• Promote awareness of benefits of REN activities
• Seek contact in all countries in each region to
start NRENS and to become part of the regional
RENs
• Organise and/or participate in events in
countries with emerging NRENs
• Work with continental and regional
organisations (AAU, E-Africa Commission,
Nigerian ICT Forum, etc)
Addressing Challenges (3):
Expertise Scarcity
• Share expertise (communities of practice)
• Work with organisations like Afnog, and
offer internships to address capacity
deficits;
• Create a network engineering group
• Guide universities on improved curricula
Addressing challenges (4):
Limited Funding for NRENs
• Support lobbying and advocacy at national level
to increase public funding for the growth of
connectivity and NRENs (it is working)
• Develop a clear business case and model that
will create continuing relevance and withstand
competition
• Develop a clear master plan as a basis for
engaging development partners
Addressing challenges (5):
Disabling Policy and Regulation
• Engagement of national and regional
administrations, making a research-based
case for liberalisation, and for special
consideration for research and education
networking as a development stimulant
Addressing challenge (6):
Isolation of Africa
• We urge a new mindset: “bringing the
world to Africa”. The message – “Come
and meet us at the cable landing points in
Africa – It is an investment. Not only are
you better able to afford it, we shall all
benefit”
UbuntuNet Current Operations (1)
Internet
Géant
UbuntuNet,
London
VSAT connection.
GRE tunnel to
UbuntuNet
KENET
SAT-3 submarine
cable
Swaziland
TENET/
SANReN
UbuntuNet,
Johannesburg
Botswana
Lesotho
Namibia
MoRENet
UbuntuNet Current Operations (2)
Internet
Géant
UbuntuNet router in
London
Peering with local
ISPs (7 so far)
UbuntuNet router in
Johannesburg
Local transit
links
JINX
Transit from
Telia Sonera and
DataHop
Reefhead
JHB
STM-1 circuits on SAT-3
submarine cable
Breehead
CPT
Internet
Solutions
SA
Internet
Appreciation to our supporters to-date
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
IDRC and Connectivity Africa
European Commission
DANTE
USAID
Cisco
IEEAF
GEO/GMRE
Open Society Institute
Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa
TENET's FRENIA (Fostering Research and Education
Networking in Africa) Program, funded by The Andrew W
Mellon Foundation.
• KTH (Sweden)
• University of Washington&Pacific North-West Giga Pop
Conclusion: We are creating the future
of research and education networking..
• “We know that we have it in ourselves as
Africans, to change all this [the
challenges we face]. We must assert our
will to do so. We must say there is no
obstacle big enough to stop us from
bringing about an African renaissance.”
– Nelson Mandela
• Thank you