EASSY is Next
On Monday, WIOCC’s CEO Chris Wood announced completion of the EASSY submarine cable, of which WIOCC is the largest investor, for the end of June 2010. After much delay due to shareholding structure divergences, the much awaited infrastructure will bring 1.4 Tbps in additional capacity to the African East coast. The cable owned by 16 different investors aims to provide fast and reliable international bandwidth access to 10 countries including Botswana, Burundi, Ethiopia, Lesotho, Malawi, Rwanda, Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Only the coastal countries will initially benefit from access to the cable while inland international terrestrial links are built. The cable is bound to compete in the mid to long term with Seacom’s cable which already offers a capacity 1.2 Tbps to South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania and Kenya. The implications of the arrival of EASSY are multiple for Africa’s eastern markets.
TARIFFS: as we found in our latest report on the Future of African Broadband, the landing of submarine cable on the east coast of Africa will divide end-user’s access price by 2-5. In Kenya and South Africa, for example, the arrival of Seacom and TEAMS cables have already led to a more than 50% decline in retail prices from 2008 levels in some speed categories.
ADRESSABLE MARKET: while some inhibitors will remain such as end-users’ equipment cost (PC, router, 3G device) will remain the lower access tariffs mean that a larger share of East Africa population will be able to afford the service. We found in our latest report that the EASSY cable will provide bandwidth to countries where the addressable market for an internet access at US$25 per month varies between 1% for Rwanda and 20% for Botswana.
ADOPTION: the landing of EASSY is not the solution to all broadband adoption issues in East Africa. Adoption levels will increase substantially but are bound to remain relatively low for some markets over the next five years. Penetration levels at YE2015 will vary between 0.67% of households in Zambia to 40% in Botswana. Some major questions remain. How fast operators will be able to invest in the last mile network infrastructure needed to deliver the bandwidth? Can manufacturer provide smart phones to Africans? Are Broadband Computing bundles a solution?
Our latest report on the “Future of African Broadband” sponsored by the WIOCC, provides investors and operators alike with some crucial elements to answer those key questions in the development of broadband in Africa.