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Dark Fibre Africa invests R75m in Benoni

Johannesburg, 16 Apr 2012

Dark Fibre Africa (DFA) is currently deploying a fibre infrastructure in excess of R75 million in and around the Benoni metropolitan area. In co-operation with Benoni Municipality, this project will not only launch the city into the digital age, but it will also bring significant investment into the area.

DFA has evolved into the largest open access fibre infrastructure provider in southern Africa, with an expenditure plan in excess of R3.5 billion countrywide.

The socio-economic benefits of fibre-optic networks are vast; affordable broadband contributes to increased economic activity. Expansion of communications infrastructure brings about new business opportunities that are dependent on broadband like ISPs, Internet cafes and banking services.

Open access broadband also stimulates competition within the telecommunications market, ultimately reducing Internet costs. Furthermore, the competitive advantage and productivity gains of broadband are enormous. Municipalities are able to provide electronic services, education levels improve with access to information, and communities have access to e-health and e-learning.

Dark Fibre Africa CEO Gustav Smit says they merely provide the open fibre infrastructure. “This enables licensed operators like Vodacom, MTN, Cell C and ISPs like Internet Solutions and MWeb to give communities easier access to the network at much greater speeds.

Smit has called on ISPs to play a leading role in mobilising communities. “End-users simply don't know what 20Mbps or 100Mbps to the home means. An opportunity needs to be created for users to test drive serious broadband. DFA is here to provide a long-term sustainable solution to the local community.”

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Dark Fibre Africa (DFA)

Dark Fibre Africa (DFA), a local open access dark fibre infrastructure provider, specialises in the financing, building and installation of carrier neutral, open access, ducting infrastructure. The company started rolling out its network in metropolitan areas in October 2007 and has already laid in excess of 5 000 kilometres of infrastructure that is open to all licensed players, on equal terms.

This infrastructure is commissioned by licensed telecom and Internet operators, which provide high-speed voice, data and video services to customers. The underlying business principle is that of an independent 'open access' infrastructure. With DFA acting purely as landlord, the infrastructure is entirely operator neutral and does not differentiate between users.

The basis of the model is that DFA is building and managing a first-class physical infrastructure for any licensed operator to take advantage of. Licensed operators now have a ready-made infrastructure on which to build their differentiating converged services, bringing these services to market quicker, thereby enjoying earlier revenue generation.

There is a state-of-the-art network monitoring centre in Rivonia (Johannesburg) that provides operators with outsourced fibre network management services and offers continuous communication with clients should the unthinkable incident occur. Any service provider, licensed to do so by ICASA, may rent fibres from DFA for their own transmission and backbone infrastructure purposes.

DFA assumes the role of physical infrastructure developer, funds the roll-out, and on completion, provides all operators with a first-class secure ducting infrastructure on which licensed operators can build their services. The deployment of metro and long haul open access ducting, optimised for fibre network deployment, will enable larger users of communications capacity to enjoy logical separation and ownership of communications capacity, while sharing the same physical right of way and access routes with other carriers.

DFA is extremely proud of claiming the prestigious 'New Entrant of the Year' award at the annual AfricaCom awards ceremony in 2009. In 2010, DFA was awarded the 'Best Cost Efficiency Solution for Africa' for the 'Fibre to the Tower'. The AfricaCom awards recognise excellence and outstanding performance in the African telecommunications industry over a 12-month period.

Editorial contacts

Ivor van Rensburg
IT Public Relations
082 652 8050
ivor@itpr.co.za
Laurelle Schultze
Dark Fibre Africa
(082) 552-4623
laurelle.schultze@dfafrica.co.za