Intelligent Data Centres Issue 08 | Page 41

EXPERT OPINION Outlook and Forecast 2019 – 2024, the data centre construction market in the Middle East and Africa is expected to reach US$1billion during the forecast period. The current trend of the world’s biggest technology firms building data centres in the Middle East is a result of the countries in the region diversifying their economies. Digital Transformation initiatives across the public and private sector are driving the need to build state-of-the-art data centres to support the transformation journeys of enterprises. New technologies and business transformation tools ranging from multi-cloud, Internet of Things (IoT), Blockchain, Artificial Intelligence (AI) to Machine Learning (ML) – all of which depend on high-performance networks – are fundamentally changing the way data is being produced, shared and analysed, requiring a rethink in data centre strategy and architecture, driving demand for local clouds. Digital business leaders today are leveraging interconnection to solve the complex integration and control challenges of an increasingly distributed infrastructure. Equinix’s second annual market study, the Global Interconnection Index (GXI), concluded that interconnection or direct and private traffic exchange between key business partners is becoming the de facto method for companies to operate in today’s digital world. If you take a more detailed look at how the design of today’s interconnected IT is evolving then we see that due to legislation, data security considerations in country and network latency performance, some data sets and workloads need to live in country, localised to those governments, people and/or enterprises using it. On a regional level, we are seeing that hyperscalers, network services providers and general ICT providers are building a hub where these data sets and applications are living and serving regional demand. As more Middle East businesses embrace multi-cloud and hybrid cloud infrastructures, greater demand for private interconnection is expected between businesses and the cloud and IT provider. Proximity between private and public cloud environments enable organisations to lower latency and networking costs. This is where we see private interconnection coming into play with many of our customers. Hugh Dignum, Head of Data Centre Products at Injazat As we welcome the Fourth Industrial Revolution and related technologies including AI, IoT and cloud computing, companies are becoming more digital – from operations to services. To facilitate a continuous move to digitisation, companies require reliable, secure and fast infrastructure to hold their data and query it to enable their processes when required. Data centres are the heart of any IT and Operational Technology (OT) infrastructure in any sector including banks, energy, Internet, transport, health and entertainment. Every industry relies on fast and secure applications that a modern data centre can provide today. Jeroen Schlosser, Managing Director, Equinix MENA www.intelligentdatacentres.com With SMEs – which make up around 90% of Middle East companies – joining the digitisation bandwagon, there is a massive requirement for keeping data in a safe and efficient environment. Data centres have historically helped companies increase Hugh Dignum, Head of Data Centre Products at Injazat their revenues and profit margins while also presenting risks such as system downtime that can adversely affect company operations. Moreover, a data breach in an organisation is known to cause an absolute financial, operational and reputational catastrophe for the company; the impact of which will be felt by their customers and supporting organisations. Therefore, it is crucial to ensure a safe, reliable, secure and robust data centre at the core of a company’s infrastructure. THE CURRENT TREND OF THE WORLD’S BIGGEST TECHNOLOGY FIRMS BUILDING DATA CENTRES IN THE MIDDLE EAST IS A RESULT OF THE COUNTRIES IN THE REGION DIVERSIFYING THEIR ECONOMIES. Issue 08 41