Wednesday 12 November 2014

There is hope for a fast Internet in Malawi





Is there any hope for a fast Internet in Malawi? A topical question, indeed, that is asked by the majority of Internet users in Malawi. The future of Malawi’s Internet is fast. For the students, research and others in the education sectors in Malawi, help is on the way through UbuntuNet, the high speed Internet network for research and education in Eastern and Southern Africa.  
No doubt. The slow internet causes many inconveniences for business and personal users. However, for students and researchers, Malawi’s slow internet is a tremendous challenge as it could spell the difference between a failed project and a success. The African research and education community has for far too long carried the burden of slow Internet connectivity which has consequently widened the gap between the continent’s researchers and their peers globally.
Realizing that research is the core of any meaningful and sustainable development, the European Union co-funded a 4 year project called the AfricaConnect. The AfricaConnect project aims to establish an affordable high-capacity Internet network for research and education in Southern and Eastern Africa to provide the region with a gateway to global research collaboration. Malawi through the government is part of this Initiative.
 AfricaConnect Project is partly funded by the European Commission’s DG Development and Cooperation – EuropeAid, in the framework of the ‘ACP Connect’ programme of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP), which has injected €11.8 million (about MK700 Million) of MK850 million (€14.75M) total budget of the project. The remainder is being contributed by the African partners.  
The collaborative initiative is being coordinated by DANTE Ltd based in Cambridge, UK, and partnered by UbuntuNet Alliance for Research and Education Networking, Eastern and Southern Africa’s association of National Research and Education networks (NRENs). Other parties participating in the project include the West and Central African Research and Education Network (WACREN) – as well as the Association of African Universities; existing National Research and Education Networks in Africa (DRC, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Madagascar, Namibia, Rwanda, Somalia, Sudan, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia); and several European NRENs (Germany, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal and the UK).
However, as with any progress comes responsibility. Terms for AfricaConnect beneficiaries include that the researchers and education institutions join together to form National Research and Education Networks (NREN) and further harmonize at regional level under UbuntuNet Alliance.
A major immediate impact of the network to countries like Zambia that readily embraced the project is that connectivity costs have dropped from a regional average of $4000 per megabit per second per month to $135 per megabit per second per month indicating a 97 percent price reduction in just four years!
 “We are delivering international and regional bandwidth to NRENs in these counties at a consolidated price of $135 per megabit per second per month. I find this exciting, because, at last we have eliminated one barrier to regional participation in global research and education collaboration,” Says Chief Executive Officer of UbuntuNet Alliance, Eng. Dr Tusu Tusubira.
Dr Tusubira promises that the aim is to reduce connectivity to an average of less than $100 per month per megabit per second by 2017.
This network offering high speed and yet affordable connectivity is extremely complex and requires specialized human resources to manage the networks and connections in all participating countries. To build a critical mass of well trained engineers to manage he network, the AfricaConnect project in partnership with, the International Network for Availability of Scientific Publications (INASP) and Network Startup Resource Center (NSRC) and the Internet Society (ISOC) provides capacity building initiatives to train engineers in all participating countries.
Since 2011, over 40 network engineers from countries that include Malawi have been trained in advanced routing. Some have been trained as trainers to help trickle down the expertise they gain. Presently, peak 17 of the engineers that have been able to replicate their skills by organising training workshops in their countries are headed to Lusaka for further training at UbuntuNet-Connect 2014, the annual conference of UbuntuNet Alliance. Though Malawi’s network engineers failed to scoop this opportunity, there is hope for further training, next year.
That said the future of Internet in Malawi is certainly fast, especially for the research and education sector. As a founding member of the UbuntuNet Alliance, Malawi through the Malawi Research and Education Network (MAREN) having already committed some funds to connect to the UbuntuNet network, remains to contribute about MK100 million to meet its financial obligation as part of the Euro 280,000 required to start benefitting from the high speed connectivity, which will enable Malawi to save millions.
AfricaConnect has birthed a more reliable, secure, high-speed network that offers greater connectivity between African countries, as well as high-speed links to the pan-European GÉANT.
Economically, the UbuntuNet network is gradually pushing countries in this Eastern and Southern Africa towards realizing the MDGs through improved ICT.
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