Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 12 | Page 17

NEWS Angola Cables and WACREN expand connectivity for academic institutions MTN and Huawei deploy connected driver IoT solution in South Africa A ngola Cables has announced an agreement with the West and Central African Research and Education Network (WACREN), the regional research and education network (REN) that facilitates interconnections between national RENs in West and Central Africa. The agreement will support the growing connectivity among academic communities across West and Central Africa, including services that foster collaboration between research and education institutions within and beyond the region. According to Antonio Nunes, CEO of Angola Cables: “WACREN is an important player in Africa’s growing connectivity requirements, and Angola Cables recognises the need for African scientists, researchers and other academics to have bandwidth comparable to their international colleagues.” Angola Cables is part of the consortium of companies that manage the West Africa Cable System (WACS), which provides carrier- level services to operators in Angola and in the sub-Saharan region of Africa. The company is also building the South Atlantic Cable System (SACS) between Angola and Brazil that is expected to be completed in mid-2018, which will connect to the Monet submarine cable system – linking Santos and Fortaleza in Brazil, and Boca Raton, Florida, in the USA – a project which is currently being completed. “As we grow our alliance, Angola Cables will certainly play an important role in enabling us to boost the connectivity in our region and beyond, and allow our members to collaborate more efficiently among themselves and with colleagues in other parts of the world,” said Boubakar Barry, CEO of WACREN. M TN Business has launched a connected driver, usage-based insurance (UBI) solution in partnership with Huawei. MTN will be the first mobile operator in South Africa to commercially deploy a connected driver solution, which uses IoT to monitor and assess driver behaviour and motivate better driving. “This solution is a great tool for driver safety, car maintenance and road safety in general. It is also a great usage-based insurance product,” says Melao Mashale, MTN Business Senior Manager of Enterprise IoT Solutions. The MTN and Huawei solution uses an on-board diagnostic (OBD) device that connects the car to a mobile app for private use or to a data centre for commercial users like insurance or fleet management firms. Driver behaviour such www.intelligentcio.com as speed and braking can be monitored and assessed. “The benefit for insurers is that through data analytics the system can give drivers a rating. Vehicle insurers can utilise this to offer incentives for better driving which will in-turn reduce accidents and the associated claims,” says Mashale. MTN is offering 1,000 OBD devices to its first car insurer customer to promote usage-based insurance in the South African market. “There are over 11 million cars on South Africa’s roads, of which about 35% are covered by insurance, so this is a huge market for MTN to make a difference,” says Zhu Ming, Huawei’s Regional IoT Director. MTN and Huawei hope that through UBI and connected drivers, South Africa’s high road accident rate will gradually decrease through improved driver behaviour. n INTELLIGENTCIO 17