Cheap Internet sparks Tanzania
access revolution
The arrival of new submarine telecommunications cables, paired with government investment in the national telecommunications backbone has seen the cost of Internet connectivity drop by 15 US cents a day in Tanzania.
This represents an
effective drop of thousands of percent in the cost of Internet bandwidth in the
country over the past three to four years, says Anna Kahama-Rupia, managing
director of SEACOM Tanzania.
She says that before
2009, the US$5,000 to $10,000 cost for dedicated fixed-line meant that only
larger businesses could afford access to broadband connectivity. Internet
access for an ordinary private citizen was almost unheard of.
Today, many Tanzanians
are paying as little as $15 a month to enjoy high-speed mobile access to the
Internet from their cellphones, including the cost voice calls. This has had an
enormous transformative effect on education, entrepreneurship and social life
in the country, adds Kahama-Rupia.
Kahama-Rupia says that
the change in Tanzania’s telecommunications landscape can be attributed to two
major factors: the arrival of new submarine cables in the country, starting
with SEACOM in 2009, and a massive effort led by the government to rollout
10,000km of national backbone crisscrossing Tanzania up to the eight countries
on its borders.
Before the arrival of
SEACOM, there was just 300 Mbps of international bandwidth coming into Tanzania
for the country’s 50 million people. Today, there is around 10G, a factor that
has helped to bring connectivity costs down dramatically.
The government’s $200
million investment in the national backbone means that this international
connectivity reaches into towns and cities right across the country, and even
brings it to the doorsteps of Tanzania’s landlocked neighbours. As a result,
Tanzania is becoming a major technology and communications hub for the entire
region.
Just recently, the
state-owned Tanzania Telecommunication Company was awarded a $6.7m deal to
supply 1,244 Mbps of internet bandwidth into Rwanda, a transaction with
benefits for both countries. Tanzania is growing its own economy while helping
other countries to drive down their communications costs.
Cheaper broadband is
also benefiting Tanzania’s education sector, says Kahama-Rupia. The University
of Dar Es Salaam was paying $10,000 a month for 13Mbps of slow satellite
connectivity.
Now, SEACOM have
linked it to the Internet for a fraction of the price and with enough bandwidth
to support richer Web apps than the university could before.
More Internet
bandwidth also means that there are opportunities to reach young people in
remote areas that are underserviced by schools and teachers with e-learning
services at an affordable cost.
Government has
embraced telecommunications as part of a wider strategy to deliver electronic
services including education, healthcare, and e-government to the people. It
plans to do so through telecentres spread throughout the country, says
Kahama-Rupia.
There is a flurry of
innovation underway in Tanzania’s telecommunications market, thanks to lighter
regulation of the market and the new national and international cables. Mobile
networks have turned themselves into major data players, innovating with
services such as voice-over-IP, video messaging and video calling.
African
telecommunications operator Smile Telecom recently launched mobile broadband
services including live video chat and TV streaming following its deployment of
the first commercial LTE 800 Mhz network in Africa.
The impact on
Tanzanian consumers and businesses has been remarkable. Before mid-2009,
Internet cafes with high access costs were the only viable way for SMEs and
ordinary consumers to use the Web, and even corporates and educational
institutions had to strictly ration bandwidth, says Kahama-Rupia.
Now, SMEs are trading
on the Web, relying on instant messaging, and even using multimedia Web
applications for the first time. Many large multinationals are looking at
investing in the country for the first time, now that a sound communications
backbone is in place. For consumers, social media, mobile banking and other
applications are now a part of their everyday lives.
“The opportunities
this has created – economic and otherwise – are enormous. There is reason to
believe that we are just getting started. With only an estimated 2.5% of the
population having access to the Internet, there is plenty of scope for
growth," Kahama-Rupia says.
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access revolution'
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