Intelligent CIO Africa Issue 13 | Page 50

“ COUNTRY FOCUS: ANGOLA SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA IS POISED FOR A PARADIGM SHIFT IN CONNECTIVITY, CENTRED IN ANGOLA. million people in the region accessing the Internet through mobile devices. In 2016 mobile technologies and services generated $110 billion of economic value in Sub-Saharan Africa, equivalent to 7.7% of GDP. As local and global connectivity continue to improve, mobile’s contribution to GDP is expected to increase to $142 billion, equivalent to 8.6% of GDP, by 2020. Given that Angola has been ranked 120th out of 141 countries in the Global Innovation Index, there is more room for improvement. The signs from the new President of Angola seem to be positive in promoting long-term growth, improving productivity and creating jobs. As an example of the future-oriented thinking of the Angolan government, as far back as 2009 (the year Angola Cables entered the WACS consortium), they invited five local telecommunications operators to be shareholders of Angola Cables, propelling the start of SACS three years later. Research and Education Beyond commerce and communications, the telecoms/mobile ecosystem in the region is linking up academic institutions and research and education (R&E) organisations in other parts of the world. As trans-Atlantic connectivity improves with the completion of SACS and Monet, universities and other learning communities in Africa, North American and Latin American countries are increasingly collaborating to improve knowledge sharing and research. An example is the recent signing of an agreement between Angola Cables and 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, including those in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Togo. The agreement supports 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. As part of its work in the region, WACREN has been involved in the TransAfrican Network Development, a project that aims to expand integration into the global REN community, as well as Sci-GaIA (Energising Scientific Endeavour through Science Gateways and e-Infrastructures in Africa), an Africa-wide project that produces educational and training resources in various fields of science, and MAGIC (Middleware for collaborative Applications and Global Virtual Communities). The on-going development of Africa depends on the degree to which it can globally integrate with the digital economy. With a growing appetite for data and mobile devices requiring broadband connectivity 50 INTELLIGENTCIO (supported by next-generation international networks), the continent requires investment in its telecommunications capacity in order to support socio-economic advancement. With the imminent launch of a trans-Atlantic cable system between Africa and the Americas, Sub- Saharan Africa is poised for a paradigm shift in connectivity, centred in Angola. It will also be a profound and symbolic step toward the continent taking the driver’s seat in expanding the region’s economic opportunities and determining its digital destiny. n www.intelligentcio.com