<div style="direction: ltr;">Private sector begins mapping for seabed cable<br>Lesley Stones<br><a onclick="return top.js.OpenExtLink(window,event,this)" href="http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/technology.aspx?ID=BD4A503649" target="_blank">http://www.businessday.co.za<wbr>/articles/technology.aspx?ID<wbr>=BD4A503649</a><br><br>WHILE progress on a government-backed undersea cable to boost Africa's<br>bandwidth remains embroiled in political bickering, private investors<br>constructing a rival cable have begun mapping out the ocean bed ready<br>to start installation.<br><br>Work has begun on the Seacom cable connecting SA to Mozambique,<br>Madagascar, Tanzania and Kenya.<br><br>It will then be linked to global networks in India, the Middle East and Europe.<br><br>The marine surveying is being carried out by Tyco Telecommunications,<br>a pioneer in undersea communications technology that has designed and<br>installed more than 80 undersea systems.<br><br>Tyco's survey
vessel, the Fugro Gauss, arrived in Durban on June 17<br>and was due to set off yesterday to begin assessing the 13000km route<br>along the east coast of Africa.<br><br>The $300m project is being led by Herakles Telecom, but its vice-<br>president, Brian Herlihy, has declined to identify other private<br>investors backing the venture.<br><br>"The arrival of the Fugro Gauss in the Durban harbour to start the<br>marine survey, which precedes the construction of the Seacom cable, is<br>a reassurance to the African communities which we serve of our<br>commitment to construction deadlines," said Herlihy.<br><br>Seacom's fibreoptic link is due to go live early in 2009 and promises<br>cheap, high-capacity bandwidth for national carriers, broadcasters,<br>and education and research networks.<br><br>"East and South African user demand for international bandwidth,<br>whether for business, institution or individual use, has greatly<br>surpassed the existing supply," said
Herlihy.<br><br>"Seacom, as an international submarine cable system, will provide<br>significant supply at affordable prices.<br><br>"The system will deliver infrastructure support for the growth of the<br>information and communication technology sector, in particular<br>business process outsourcing, call centres, pharmaceutical research<br>industries and education networks."<br><br>The Indian Ocean's African seabed is the only one in the world without<br>a fibreoptic cable, forcing Africa to rely heavily on expensive<br>satellite links and to route calls between neighbouring countries via<br>Europe.<br><br>Earlier this year, Associated Press quoted Herlihy as saying: "We<br>think that the high price of satellite communication is creating an<br>artificially low demand market and, because of that, we think there is<br>pent-up demand."<br><br>Less progress has been made with the East African Submarine System<br>(Eassy), a 9900km fibreoptic line supposed to link SA to Sudan.
Last<br>week, Parliament ratified the broadband protocol of the New<br>Partnership for Africa's Development (Nepad), effectively imposing<br>political power over the Eassy project, even though the $300m cable is<br>being funded by the private sector.<br><br>The Democratic Alliance voted against ratification, with spokeswoman<br>Dene Smuts opposing the move to hijack Eassy and fold it into the<br>Nepad initiative. This will give the government representatives a<br>golden share and veto rights.<br><br>The Eassy project has been held up since 2002 by wrangling over its<br>funding and ownership, and by political intervention to make sure its<br>bandwidth is not kept artificially expensive by the telecom operators<br>investing in it.<br></div><span class="sg"><br>--<br></span><BR><BR>Tel. 254 720 318 925<br><br>blog:http://beckyit.blogspot.com/<p>
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