The
EASSy has landed!
Landing
partner Telkom’s ring around Africa
The
East African Submarine Cable System (EASSy) – one of the nine
undersea telecommunications cables that will connect various parts
of Sub-Saharan Africa to the rest of the world by 2011 – will land
at Mtunzini, on the northern KwaZulu-Natal coastline,
tomorrow.
Telkom
is the South African landing partner for EASSy. In all, there are
nine EASSy landing stations in Sudan, Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya,
Tanzania, Comoros, Madagascar, Mozambique and South Africa, with
shore-end landings already having occurred in Mozambique and
Sudan.
"EASSy
is one of the elements of Telkom’s cable investment strategy and is
a key step towards the process of establishing a Telkom fibre ring
capability around Africa," said Alphonzo Samuels, Telkom’s Managing
Executive for Wholesale Services.
He
added: "EASSy further increases the robustness of Telkom’s
international bandwidth offerings and portfolio. Together with other
undersea cables and/or land based fibre routes, EASSy creates
redundant fibre access prospects into East
Africa."
EASSy
is a 10 000 km undersea cable system currently being constructed
along the east African coastline. Its 1.4 Tbps system design
capacity, coupled with its two fibre-pair configuration, equips
EASSy with the highest capacity of all undersea cable systems along
the east coast of Africa.
Interconnection
with various other undersea international cable systems will enable
traffic on EASSy to seamlessly connect to Europe, North and South
America, the Middle East and Asia, thereby enhancing the east coast
of Africa’s connectivity into the global telecommunications
network.
"EASSy
is routed from South Africa to Sudan, linking the coastal countries
of East Africa. An extensive backhaul system linking landlocked
countries to the coastal countries has been developed and is at
various stages of completion," stated Samuels, adding that EASSy is
scheduled to be ready for commercial service from August this
year.
Samuels
explained that submarine cables held many benefits such as superior
transmission quality, considerably lesser delays compared to
satellite, high transmission capacity, access to the global optical
fibre network, lower unit costs (compared to satellite), no
electromagnetic interference and higher resistance against adverse
weather conditions.
"However,
activities such as fishing and anchoring, ocean drilling, fish bites
and earthquakes constituted some of the commonly known submarine
cable hazards," cautioned Samuels.
Various
initiatives were nevertheless undertaken to protect submarine
cables. These included conducting ocean bed surveys to select the
safest undersea routes; burying cable in sand where possible,
especially at the shallow end; avoiding heavy shipping lanes when
approaching landing points; selecting safe beaches, bearing in mind
that later beach erosion could expose cables; designing the shortest
land cable route for maximum security; and, manufacturing cables to
exceed the 25 year design life of the cable
system.
"Redundancy,
protection and – where necessary – restoration are also key
considerations," said Samuels.
He
explained: "Redundancy means that we have duplicated equipment at
the cable stations, duplicated power converters, generators, etc.
Therefore, if a single piece of equipment should fail, we have
another piece of equipment standing by to take its
place."
Protection
ensures that a fully duplicated amount of capacity is available to
re-route traffic on the same cable in the event of an internal
failure impacting only one path or fibre. Protection therefore
implies that for everything that is duplicated, automated switching
takes place.
Samuels
added that restoration required traffic to be routed onto other
cable systems via completely different traffic paths and even
different routes. "This usually happens when a complete failure of a
cable system occurs, usually via an external influence such as a
ship’s anchor breaking a cable, to the extent that ‘in-system’
protection on the same system is not
possible."
He
also explained that customers have a choice between the regular
international private lease circuits that includes restoration for
their bandwidth or a product that excludes restoration, which would
be termed non-restorable bandwidth or
traffic.
"It
must be emphasised, though, that in the event of submarine cable
service interruptions, every attempt is always made to expedite
customer services," emphasised Samuels.
Although
EASSy will not be commercially active by the time this year’s 2010
FIFA World Cup™ kicks off in June, Samuels stated that "Telkom’s
undersea capacity has been significantly upgraded". "For example, by
end-October last year, SAT-3 and SAFE were upgraded to at least
three times their former capacity."
He
added that SAT3 provided the shortest route to Europe while SAFE was
the shortest link to Asia. From an undersea capacity perspective,
therefore, "it’s all systems go for the World Cup," emphasised
Samuels.
As
it’s investment in EASSy highlighted, Samuels said that Telkom had a
robust strategy with regard to undersea cable investments. The
Company’s cable investments included COLUMBUS3, SEA-ME-WE3 (South
East Asia-Middle East-Western Europe), SAT3/WASC/SAFE (South
Atlantic Telecommunications / West Africa Submarine Cable /South
Africa Far East), EASSy, EIG (Europe India Gateway) and WACS (West
Africa Cable System).
"Our
investments are geared by the participation of other operators and
we firmly believe that investment sharing translates to better unit
costs and improved customer prices," he
added.
"Ultimately,
we believe that EASSy will also go a long way towards increasing
Africa’s bandwidth capacity, affordability and create increased
diversity and fibre redundancy between SA and Europe as well as
within East Africa" concluded Samuels.
Issued
by: Group Communication and
Brand |