Tag: MainOne

  • MainOne fixes snapped submarine cable

    MainOne fixes snapped submarine cable

    MainOne, an Equinox Company, yesterday said it has concluded repairs to its submarine cable following an outage which occurred on Thursday March 14, 2024.

    Working closely with regional partners, maintenance providers, vessel owners, and permitting authorities, MainOne completed the necessary repairs to its submarine cable system thanks to the diligent efforts of all stakeholders and has resumed regular operations with the utmost integrity of its submarine cable.

    During this period, MainOne provided restoration capacity and rerouted traffic on its network to minimse the impact on its customers.

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    The Managing Director of MainOne, Funke Opeke, expressed gratitude to all stakeholders for their support through the incidence.

    We are immensely grateful for the support and collaboration of our partners, the patience of our valued customers, and the unwavering commitment of our team during this outage,” she said, adding that MaiOne’s resilience in the face of the recent outage demonstrated the company’s commitment to its customers and the region’s digital transformation.

  • Submarine cable cuts: MainOne restoring services

    Submarine cable cuts: MainOne restoring services

    • Glo1 continues to function amid disruptions

    A major internet provider for most Nigerian commercial banks and internet service providers (ISPs), MainOne, which suffered a major submarine cut that had knocked major Nigerian banks offline, said it has started the process of restoring services to some of its customers.

    The cable company, in a note shared with The Nation, said: “We have restored services to some customers and are actively working on restoring services to others via capacity acquired on available cable systems. “The estimated repair time is for our submarine cable fault to be fixed, to enable our services to become fully restored, and independently supply capacity to our customers.”

    As a result of the submarine cable breaks, customers of major Nigerian banks could not access their banking apps or use any Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD) service.

    Some big shopping malls could not even access the network to enable their customers to use point of sale (PoS) terminals.

    Subsea cable breaks on MainOne, SAT 3, WACS and ACE had had a crippling internet connectivity in Nigeria, South Africa and other countries on the continent.

    The cable outages affected several ISPs and cloud service providers and also degraded the quality of voice calls.

    In a statement on X, formerly Twitter, Vodacom had said: “Certain customers are currently experiencing intermittent connectivity issues due to multiple undersea cable failures affecting SA’s network providers, including us. We apologise for any inconvenience caused.”

    The outage had also affected services such as Microsoft Azure and Office 365.

    In an update, Microsoft had said: “We have determined that multiple fibre cables on the West Coast of Africa — WACS, MainOne, SAT3, ACE — have been impacted which reduced total capacity supporting our regions in South Africa.

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    “In addition to these cable impacts, the ongoing cable cuts in the Red Sea — EIG, Seacom, AAE-1 — are also impacting capacity on the East Coast of Africa. This combination of incidents has impacted all Africa capacity – including other cloud providers and public internet as well.”

     MTN had also issued a statement explaining the cause of the downtime. The company said: “We apologize for the challenges you may be experiencing with internet speed and accessing data services at the moment.

    “This is a result of damage to international undersea cables across East & West Africa. The repair process is ongoing to resolve the situation as soon as possible. Please look out for further updates.”

    Microsoft on Azure status had also said: “Starting at 10:30 UTC on 14 March 2024, customers using Azure Services in South Africa North and South Africa West may experience increased network latency or packet drops when accessing their resources.”

    Meanwhile, Glo 1, owned by Nigeria’s leading digital services company, Globacom, was not affected by the damage and has continued to operate normally. Data users, internet service providers and financial institutions which run on Glo 1 have continued to operate normally.

    Industry analysts believe the sturdy nature and resilience of Glo 1 International Submarine Cable is the reason why the damage did not affect the cable.

  • Internet disruptions to persist for three weeks – MainOne

    Internet disruptions to persist for three weeks – MainOne

    • Blames undersea seismic activities for cable cuts
    • Bank transfers, telcos’ services suffer more dislocations

    Internet users and ICT (Information and Communication Technologies) based business operators across the country may have to endure up to three more weeks of epileptic services, it was gathered last night.

    The disruptions were sparked by a cut on the submarine cable system in the Atlantic Ocean offshore Cote D’Ivoire, along the coast of West Africa on Thursday, leaving many business transactions in hiccups.

    Most affected are telecommunication firms, publishing companies, banks and cable companies.

    One of the undersea cable companies affected by the service disruptions, MainOne, said yesterday that the situation might persist for two to three weeks for the problem to be fixed.

    In a note shared with The Nation, the cable company said investigations revealed that the fault came from an external incident that resulted in a cut on the submarine cable system in the ocean.

    MainOne, which has a maintenance agreement with Atlantic Cable Maintenance and Repair Agreement (ACMA) to provide repair services for the submarine cable, said the rectification of the fault involves identifying and assigning a vessel to “retrieve the necessary spares required for repair, and then sail to the fault location to conduct the repair work.”

    The affected section of the submarine cable will subsequently “be pulled from the seabed onto the ship where it will be spliced by skilled technicians.”

    It added: “Post-repair joints will be inspected and tested for any defects and then the submarine cable is lowered back to the seabed and guided to a good position.

    “This process might take one to two weeks for repairs while about two to three weeks of transit time may be required for the vessel to pick up the spares and travel from Europe to West Africa once the vessel is mobilised.”

    On what could have specifically caused the outage, the company said most submarine cable faults result from human activities such as fishing and anchoring in shallow waters near shore, natural hazards such as earthquakes, landslides, and equipment failure.

    It said: “Given the distance from land, and the cable depth of about three kms at the point of fault, any kind of human activity – ship anchors, fishing, drilling, etc has been immediately ruled out.

    “Our preliminary analysis would suggest some form of seismic activity on the seabed resulted in a break to the cable, but we will obtain more data when the cable is retrieved during the repair exercise.”

    It ruled out sabotage as a likely cause of the cut “given the location and cable depth.”

    Read Also: Internet woes may persist for three weeks, says MainOne

    On the effects on its customers, it said: “International services on our cable south of the landing in Senegal have been disrupted. This has resulted in the outage of internet services for majority of our customers.

    “We recognise the impact of the outage and are working tirelessly to make available restoration capacity for temporary relief, where feasible.

    “While we do have some pre-configured restoration capacity on other cable systems, unfortunately those cable systems are also down currently. We have since acquired capacity on available cable systems, but we have not found readily available capacity to fully restore services to all our customers.”

    “We believe it is important to inform our customers of the fault details given the magnitude of the situation in order to set expectations and make contingency arrangements while the repairs are ongoing.”

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) said yesterday that service providers were working round the clock to restore internet connectivity.

     “Operators of these cables have commenced repairs already, and services are gradually being restored,” the NCC Director of Public Affairs, Reuben Muoka Director, said in a statement.

    “They have promised to work round the clock to ensure that services are restored to the affected countries within the shortest possible time.

    “It is important to bring this information to the knowledge of corporate and individual consumers on these services.”

    Many telephone and internet users as well as bank customers complained yesterday that the disruptions persisted.

    Some of the banks advised their customers to use alternative channels with mobile app and internet banking services remaining not functioning well.

    One of the banks, First City Monument Bank (FCMB), told its customers:

    §  “We understand that you are still experiencing service unavailability on *329#, FCMB Mobile, Internet Banking (Personal & Business), and our Agent Banking platform (Interbank Transfers).

    §  “The resolution of the technical issue from one of our network partners is still in progress. We are actively working hard with our partner to resolve this issue.

    §  “In the meantime, our branches and alternative channels (FCMB ATMs & POS) are available for you to carry out your transactions.”

    §  “We sincerely apologise for any inconvenience this has caused and will update you as soon as the channels become available for your use.”

  • Internet woes may persist for three weeks, says MainOne

    Internet woes may persist for three weeks, says MainOne

     MainOne, one of the undersea cable companies affected by service disruptions due to multiple cable cuts, has said it might take between two and three weeks to fix the damaged portions of the cable. 

    In a note shared with The Nation on Friday, the cable company said some form of seismic activity on the seabed resulted in a break to the cable. 

    It added that preliminary findings and further investigations revealed that the fault occurred due to an external incident that resulted in a cut on the submarine cable system, in the Atlantic Ocean offshore Cote D’Ivoire along the coast of West Africa.

    “We have a maintenance agreement with Atlantic Cable Maintenance and Repair Agreement (ACMA) to provide repair services for the submarine cable. 

    “First identify and assign a vessel, the vessel has to retrieve the necessary spares required for repair, and then sail to the fault location to conduct the repair work.

    ” Next, in order to complete the repair, the affected section of the submarine cable will have to be pulled from the seabed onto the ship where it will be spliced by skilled technicians. 

    “Post-repair, joints will be inspected and tested for any defects and then the submarine cable is lowered back to the seabed and guided to a good position. 

    “This process might take one to two weeks for repairs while about two to three weeks of transit time may be required for the vessel to pick up the spares and travel from Europe to West Africa once the vessel is mobilised., ” the company said. 

    Read Also: MainOne pushes for interconnected Africa

    On what could have specifically caused the outage, the company said most submarine cable faults occur as a result of human activities such as fishing and anchoring in shallow waters near shore, natural hazards such as earthquakes, landslides, and then equipment failure. 

    “Given the distance from land, and the cable depth of about 3 kms at the point of fault, any kind of human activity – ship anchors, fishing, drilling etc has been immediately ruled out. 

    ” Our preliminary analysis would suggest some form of seismic activity on the seabed resulted in a break to the cable, but we will obtain more data when the cable is retrieved during the repair exercise,” MainOne said.

    On whether it was intentionally sabotaged, the company said it was most unlikely. 

    ” Not likely given the location and cable depth, and as indicated above, we have strong indications on probable cause, ” the company said. 

    On the  specific sea vessels are being allocated to repair the damage, the company said: “We are working with Atlantic Cable Maintenance and Repair Agreement (ACMA) who will deploy the vessel and are unable to provide more information at this time.” 

  • MainOne pushes for interconnected Africa

    MainOne pushes for interconnected Africa

    MainOne yesterday stressed the importance of building an inclusive and interconnected internet society for the growth of the continent.

    The data center company said the critical role that peering plays in enhancing the reach, reliability, and efficiency of this new digital lifestyle cannot be overemphasized, adding that this informed its collaboration with the Internet Society (ISOC) because transformative partnerships will drive value for a more connected Africa.

    Its Country Manager, (Ghana) Emmanuel Kwarteng, who spoke at the 12th edition of the African Peering and Interconnection Forum (AfPIF) which it co-hosted with ISOC and the African IXP Association (AFIX) in Accra, Ghana, said the forum reinforced the company’s commitment to the growth of internet in Africa. The event drew a gathering of global and local industry leaders, regulators and stakeholders advancing Africa’s digital landscape and strengthening connectivity across the continent.

     MainOne said the significance of AfPIF 2023 in fostering collaborations across Africa’s digital ecosystem cannot be over emphasised.

    He said: “In an era of rapid technological advancement, the internet and content have emerged as two major pillars of modern society, transcending geographical boundaries and revolutionizing the way we do business, communicate, learn, and interact with the world around us.

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    “We cannot overemphasize the critical role that peering plays in enhancing the reach, reliability, and efficiency of this new digital lifestyle. By collaborating with the Internet Society on the shared vision of an inclusive and interconnected internet society for the continent, we believe that the transformative partnerships formed here will drive value for a more connected Africa.”

    Also speaking at the event, Ghana’s Minister of Communications and Digitization, Hon. Ursula Owusu-Ekuful stressed the need for a robust peering and interconnection ecosystem for the efficient operation of the country’s digital initiatives. This, she said, will permit local traffic and promote ICT, which is crucial for any nation wishing to participate fully in the global internet economy. “It will enhance the end-user experience, bring down access costs, and encourage the growth of regional internet ecosystems noted the minister,” she said and also highlighted the importance of supporting the aggregation of internet traffic at interconnection hubs across Africa, which would attract international operators to establish their points of presence (PoPs) in the sub-region.

    MainOne’s role as the host of AfPIF 2023 and its active commitment in fostering interconnections align with its broader mission of driving digital transformation across West Africa. This commitment was further solidified as the Ghana Internet Exchange (GIX) and MainOne, an Equinix Company Ghana, firmed up their partnership with an announcement of the extension of the GIX network to the MDXi Appolonia Data Center at the event. MainOne continues to lead with investments in infrastructural development and new Data Center builds across the West African region and is set to launch a new data center in Cote d’Ivoire before the end of this year.

    Other speakers at the event included Deputy Director-General, National Communication Authority, Ghana, Prof. Eser Osie-Yeboah Boateng; and Prof Nii Quaynor, widely known as the Father of Ghana’s internet.

  • MainOne partner CcHub on PitchDrive

    MainOne has partnered Co-Creation Hub (CcHub) and Sterling Bank on the second edition of PitchDrive tech tour currently underway.

    Ten selected startups utilising hardware and deep technology tools in their businesses are travelling through five Asian cities pitching their businesses to investors in the Asian technology ecosystem and forging partnerships to scale.

    The two-week tech tour  ended September 8.

    Tagged: PitchDrive Tour Stories, they  interacted with tech and hardware communities in Singapore, Japan, South Korea, China and Hong Kong, engaged in pitch events with Asian tech giants such as Tencent and Transsion.

    They also sought collaborations, partnerships and potential investment opportunities to further grow and scale their businesses.

    Head Marketing at MainOne, Tayo Ashiru, said sponsorship  was borne out of the firm’s deep commitment to enable the tech startup ecosystem across Africa.

  • MainOne backs UNIBEN’s ICT programme

    West Africa’s leading connectivity and data centre solutions provider, MainOne, on the heels of the expansion of its network into Edo State has assured the University of Benin (UNIBEN) of its support towards continued information communication technology (ICT) development at the university.

    The firm reiterated its commitment towards improving access to ICT on campus with the investment in fiber connectivity to campus, as well as by pledging financial support and internship opportunities for the top performing ICT students at the university.

    The pledge was made at a private meeting hosted by the Vice Chancellor of the university, Prof. Faraday Orumwense, before the start of the fourth edition of University’s ICT Day event with the theme: Building Sustainable Future with ICT Tools and Apps.

    The VC was represented by the Deputy Vice Chancellor, Ekehuan Campus, Prof. Joel Agbolagba.  The  event was focused on enlightening the students, faculty, secondary school pupils, and general public on the importance of ICT tools in the sustainable economic development of the country.

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    MainOne CEO, Funke Opeke, who was the keynote speaker at the event, stressed the importance of students taking advantage of the opportunities available to them in ICT.

    She highlighted how advances in technology and access to infrastructure, have lowered the barrier to entry for potential entrepreneurs like never before regardless of age, gender, social or educational status. She also said there are more opportunities for financing from local incubators alongside international initiatives to support the growing network of technology startups.

    Opeke said: “21st Century success as entrepreneurs or in paid employment will come from adding value with ICT tools and apps. I urge you all to go disrupt the world with an app.”

    MainOne’s ICT support of the university is underscored through the completion of the terrestrial fibre infrastructure programme it started nine months ago in partnership with the Edo State government and global social media giant, Facebook. The infrastructure which will provide connectivity for mobile operators’ base stations, Internet Service Providers (ISPs), Points of Presence (PoP), and public locations, including schools and hospitals, is now ready to be turned on across the city of Benin.

  • MainOne absorbs 36 graduate trainees

    West Africa’s premier connectivity and data centre solutions provider, MainOne, said it has absorbed 36 graduates of the second batch of its Bright Minds Graduate Trainee Programme.

    The two-month intensive training  was designed to groom fresh graduates into highly skilled technical professionals by taking them through the fundamentals of the company’s various business functions as well as the personal effectiveness skills they need to survive in today’s work place before their recruitment into the company.

    The programme combined classroom style learning with practical sessions facilitated by seasoned external consultants and specialists within MainOne to help the trainees understand the company’s core functions, which include connectivity and managed cloud services.

    The programme culminated in a five-week certification training to provide the trainees with specialised technical skills required for their various roles.

    Over 2,600 men and women were  encouraged to apply with six women after successfully completing the programme to join MainOne’s Technical Department.

    Celebrating the success of the programme at a ceremony, the Head, Corporate Services, MainOne, Tinuola Ipadeola, congratulated the recruits on the completion of the programme and urged them not to relent on their oars as they strive for excellence in their new roles.

    “On behalf of MainOne, I would like to extend our heartiest congratulations to our new recruits following their successful completion of the Bright Minds Graduate Trainee Programme from a pool of over 2,600 applicants. We are focused on building a team of game changers who are leveraging advanced technology to provide IT solutions to revolutionise businesses and enable West Africa’s digital economy.’’

  • MainOne extends submarine cable to Cote D’ivoire

    Following the issuance of a submarine cable landing licence to MainOne by the government of Cote D’Ivoire, the company said it is on schedule to land the cable and launch services in Abidjan by October, this year. It said it has made significant progress in the project implementation process.  All critical surveys have been completed, and work is ongoing at the Cable Landing Station and Data Centre in Abidjan.

    MainOne’s Regional Executive, Kazeem Oladepo, spoke during the company’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Abidjan, where members of the Board of Directors of the Group visited the VITIB location to observe the on-going construction of the data centre and the cable landing station.

    The data centre and landing station will provide the necessary infrastructure to support the growth of the broadband ecosystem in Cote D’Ivoire and the Francophone region, improve Internet access in the region, reduce bandwidth prices and make digital services more accessible.

    “By investing in this infrastructure, we hope to bring meaningful and much-needed technology solutions to businesses and enable them in their quest for improved productivity and efficiency through dedicated and reliable connectivity services. We are prepared to collaborate with operators to expand capacity in Cote D’Ivoire and neighbouring countries to enhance regional integration and global access,” he continued.

    The strategic location of the datacentre in the Grand-Bassam technology free trade zone, VITIB, will further strengthen the digital ecosystem in the zone, and attract more businesses and Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to the region.

    MainOne is committed to deepening broadband access across West Africa via fibre infrastructure and data centres. With service delivery in 10 countries including Nigeria, Ghana, Cote D’Ivoire, Burkina Faso, Togo, Cameroun, Benin, Niger, Senegal and Chad, MainOne operates up to 10Tbps  international submarine cable system which guarantees highly reliable connectivity to support the growing demand for Internet access and bandwidth-intensive applications such as eCommerce, Content providers, OTT players and electronic banking and payment services.

  • MainOne, Facebook partner fiber network

    MainOne and Facebook have partnered over  metro fiber infrastructure project in two states of Nigeria. The collaboration in infrastructure is part of Facebook’s efforts to connect more people to broadband internet. As part of this project, MainOne is building and operating approximately 750 km terrestrial fiber infrastructure in Edo and Ogun states, two of Nigeria’s fastest growing states.

    These open-access transport networks will provide metro fiber connectivity to reach more than 1,000,000 people in Benin City, Abeokuta, Sagamu and 10 other towns by connecting mobile operators’ base stations, Internet Service Providers (ISPs), Points of Presence (PoPs), and public locations including schools and hospitals. The partnership will leverage MainOne’s strength as a wholesale telecoms infrastructure service provider with investment from Facebook and support from local regulatory and state authorities to further deepen broadband penetration in Nigeria.