National Research and Education Networks (NRENs): the potential for SADC participation CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Research and Education Networking in South Africa Workshop on EC Support to Research and Education Networking in Southern and Eastern Africa - Extending.
Advertisements

South African connectivity to Géant Workshop on EC Support to Research and Education Networking in Southern and Eastern Africa - Extending the reach of.
©Ubuntunet Alliance UbuntuNet Alliance for Research and Education Networking EC Workshop Brussels 6-7 March 2006.
MS. PREMILA KUMAR CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER CONSUMER COUNCIL OF FIJI.
Business model for AFUNET. AFUNET workshop CERN Sep Senior Scientist, IPv6 and Routing.
© 2007 Verizon. All Rights Reserved. PTE /07 FCC Workshop Global Broadband Connects the World Jacquelynn Ruff Vice President, International Public.
NORDUnet Nordic Infrastructure for Research & Education NORDUnet Collaborations with Africa Lars Fischer CTO, NORDUnet 2010 EURO-AFRICA E-INFRASTRUCTURES.
Do what you love. Love what you do. Geoff Rehmet SAT3 – 2007 and beyond internet solutions.
Vivien Foster & Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, World Bank.
Connect. Communicate. Collaborate Eastern GÉANT2 Extension Porta Optica Study Regional Workshop Kiev H. Döbbeling DANTE.
An African perspective on R&E networking in sub-Saharan Africa Meeting on enhancing research and education networking within and to Africa Washington DC,
Sarua-Fibre project Challenges involved in the establishment of an academic broadband backbone in Southern and East Africa Supported by IDRC Björn Pehrson.
Internet Policy Day 1 - Workshop Session No. 2 Market structure Prepared for CTO by Link Centre, Witwatersrand University, South Africa.
1 Feb 2010 Jean-Louis Parmentier Chief Operating Officer, SEACOM Ltd SEACOM Story Update FEAST Workshop Bruxelles, February 25th,
1 Infrastructure Developments Duncan Martin Director (non-exec): UbuntuNet Alliance Director and CEO: TENET, South Africa Development Partners’ Forum 10.
Business Aspects of Internet Exchanges AFIX Technical Workshop Session 7.
The Emerging NRENs of Sub-Saharan Africa TERENA Networking Conference 2006 "FOLLOW THE USER" 15 – 18 May 2006 Catania, Sicily Duncan Martin The UbuntuNet.
Future of Africa’s iGDP Protect. Connect. Grow.. Is Africa still a significant market? Africa is the 2nd largest continent, in both size and population.
1 Connectivity and Collaboration Duncan Martin (CEO) Tertiary Education Network (TENET), South Africa UNIVERSITY LEADERS’ FORUM Partnership for Higher.
Telecoms Services Sector in the Caribbean Derek Browne Information Technology Specialist CIF November 5, 2007.
Increasing Access, Reducing Costs Consolidation and Management of the Bandwidth Consortium SANDRA ALUOCH.
UbuntuNet Alliance Brief to IST-2008 Conference 7 – 9 May 2008, Windhoek, Namibia “When the webs of a spider combine, they can trap a.
Porta Optica Feasibility Study of OPTICAL GATEWAY to Eastern Europe POS Consortium Coordinator: Artur Binczewski (PSNC) presented by: Jacek Gajewski (CEENet)
UbuntuNet Alliance Information for Change: Securing affordable high speed connectivity and efficient ICT access and usage for African.
Internet Policy Day 2 - Workshop Session No. 3 Interconnection, IXPs and Voice-over-IP Prepared for CTO by Link Centre, Witwatersrand University, South.
Black Sea Initiative Ramaz Kvatadze (GRENA, CEENet) Jacek Gajewski (CEENet) Kiev, 11 October, 2006.
Connect. Communicate. Collaborate GÉANT2 and University Connectivity to NRENs Michael Nowlan, DANTE (with thanks to Cathrin Stöver) UBUNTUNET-CONNECT 2008.
Internet Bandwidth Challenges Strategies for optimising and managing bandwidth in low bandwidth environments Executive manager’s overview and briefing.
Regional Connectivity Program in Sub-Saharan Africa Cecile Niang GICT Africa Team Thursday, May 5, 2005.
1 connect communicate collaborate FEAST Feasibility Study for African – European Research and Education Network 27th October 2009 Michael Nowlan, DANTE.
Connecting People, Reaching Out Partnering with National Research and Education Networks (NRENs) Michael Foley, SARDE, World Bank.
Policies for Peering and Internet Exchanges AFIX Technical Workshop Session 8.
Challenges facing ISPs in Africa: a view from an African ISP William Stucke AfrISPA ZAnet Internet Services.
Insert Org Logo in Master slide AFRICAN INTERCONNECTION Value proposition: Ubuntunet Alliance Albert Nsengiyumva Rwanda Education and Research Network.
DataTAG Research and Technological Development for a Transatlantic Grid Abstract Several major international Grid development projects are underway at.
Open vs closed approaches to international fibre Russell Southwood CEO, Balancing Act
1 Developing effective NRENs Duncan Martin Director (non-exec): UbuntuNet Alliance Director and CEO: TENET, South Africa UbuntuNet Connect November.
International Research Networking Eumedgrid EGEE ’07: Grids and their role in sustaining development 1 October 2007 e-Infrastructures in the.
South African National Research Network (SANReN) Imraan Saloojee DST, South Africa International workshop on African Research.
Draft Action Plan for the Implementation of WCIT12 outcomes By Dr. Sherif Guinena Advisor to NTRA Exec. President Coordinator for African Common Proposals.
1 4th Southern Africa Regional Broadband, Next Generation Networks and New Technologies Workshop 2014 Midrand, Johannesburg, South Africa November.
1 UbuntuNet Duncan Martin Planning Workshop amongst IEEAF, RENU and UbuntuNet Kampala, 16 – 17 October 2007.
Introduce the project Africa IXP (Team 4). Introduce team members.
Valentino Cavalli SEEREN Inauguration, Thessaloniki, 09/01/ Digital Divide and Policy Issues for NRENs in South East Europe Valentino Cavalli TERENA.
EGYAfrica Workshop: better Internet connectivity for research and education in Africa Accra, November 2010 Dr Daniel NYANGANYURA ICSU Regional Office.
1 BRIEFING ON THE UNDERSEA CABLES PRESENTATION TO PARLIAMENT PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE ON COMMUNICATIONS 11 MARCH 2008 CAPE TOWN.
Update on NREN developments in South Africa Progress and Challenges in Building National Research and Education Networks In Africa: A View from the Field.
SARUA Higher Education’s leadership rôle in providing leaders, developing new science and technology, stimulating commerce, and reducing poverty in Southern.
A PRESENTATION ON REGIONAL REGULATORY CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT AND REGIONAL CONNECTIVITY CTO FORUM 2004 AT THE CTO FORUM 2004, 20-21, SEPTEMBER 2004, Sri Lanka.
Internet Exchange Points: A Business & Policy Perspective AFIX Decision-makers’ Workshop Session 1 AFIX-TF,
Supporting education and research Middle East Digital Library Workshop Network Infrastructure Dr Malcolm Read JISC Executive Secretary.
FEAST Feasibility Study for the AfricaConnect Initiative.
G É ANT2 Development Support Activity and the Republic of Moldova 1st RENAM User Conference Chisinau, Republic of Moldova 14-May-2007 Valentino Cavalli.
"The views expressed in this presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the European Commission" Global reach of.
UbuntuNet Alliance Services to NRENs Tiwonge Msulira Banda Seminar on Building Successful NRENs in Eastern and Southern Africa.
UbuntuNet Alliance Updates Implementation Updates, CORENA Phase 2 FEAST meeting - Brussels F F Tusubira, CEO -
NRENs and their Responsibilities UbuntuNet Leadership Seminar 28 April 2016, Dar es Salaam Duncan Martin, Consultant.
Implementing National Research and Education Networks (NRENs) in land locked African countries: critical success factors 1 D. Kunda, Director ICT B. Khunga,
Research and Education Networks Services and Benefits to Participating Members Prof. AbdulGaniy O. RAJI Formerly Director, Management Information System.
Developing sustainable and cost effective compute platforms for NREN PRESENTED BY EJOVI AROR GROUP MD IPNX NIGERIA LIMITED 25 th NOVEMBER 2013.
PORTA OPTICA STUDY Distributed Optical Gateway to Eastern Europe Artur Binczewski, Miłosz Przywecki, Maciej Stroiński, Wojciech Śronek,
Increasing Bandwidth for African University Development Internet2 Workshop April 2004.
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Arab Regional Office
Tusu Tusubira, CEO, UbuntuNet Alliance Presentation to CLARA
Role of Research and Education Networks in Higher Learning and Research Institutions Sci-GaIA Workshop 5 September 2016, Dar es Salaam Prof. Idris Rai,
New policy environment for the South African telecommunications sector
Zambia Research and Education Network (Creation of an NREN in Zambia) Bonny Khunga. CEO ZAMREN ZAMREN 7/6/2018.
ITU an Overview Combined International SNO and 8th African SNO
Internet Interconnection
BROADBAND SA CONNECT - AN OPPORTUNITY FOR SMALL ICT BUSINESSES
Presentation transcript:

National Research and Education Networks (NRENs): the potential for SADC participation CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa Pretoria, 5 – 7 September 2005 Duncan Martin CEO of TENET

2 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa The origin of the NREN 1970’s: Internet started by US DoD research arm. 1980’s: US academe takes control. Free for all. Netiquette defines the rules. is what it’s about. Distributed, user-led management. 1990’s: Growth of the WWW. Jan Allerman gets connected. Rise of the ISP industry Intellectual property issues become important. Commercial interests vie for control. 2000’s: Commerce and governments take control. Congestion. Top level policy power passes to political and legislative levels Spam (unsolicited, bulk marketing by ) Access circuits congested by by student and browsing Institutional budgets stretched Academe’s Response: Let’s build RENs!

3 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa So what exactly is a REN? Acronyms: REN: “Research and Education Network” NREN: “National REN” RREN: “Regional REN” (e.g NorduNET in Scandinavia) RENS are an integral part of the Internet; but provide alternative links and routes between member sites Carry only traffic passing between member sites. (“Private” networks in this sense…) Usually, members must be research and/or educational institutions May have peering agreements with other RENs Have transit agreement with “superRENs” like Géant

4 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa Who owns NRENS? Of the 34 NRENs in Europe Approx. 50% controlled by state agencies Approx 50% consortia of user institutions In the USA, there are many different RENs National scope: NSFNet, ESNet, Internet2, LambdaRail,.. State scope: CENIC, NYSERNET,.. Manifold inter-connection agreements Some, but not many, financed by federal agencies

5 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa Géant Géant – the “superREN” Initiative of (and partly funded by) the European Commission Very high-speed (up to 10 Gb/s) backbone network Inter-connects 34 European NRENs Has 7.5 Gb/s trans-Atlantic connections to Internet2 and CANARIE Has connections to APAN (Asia Pacific Academic Network) Operated by a non-profit UK company called “Dante” under contract to the EC (see As a result, there’s a unique, global REN If you connect to Géant and/or to Internet2, you connect to it! The EC looks to a country’s government to identify that country’s NREN for purposes of connecting to Géant.

6 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa So: in the developed world: NRENs have arisen to ensure that advanced networking traffic is not disabled by congestion from commodity- type traffic develop next-generation networking and applications in research and higher education. (Extract from Internet2’s interconnection MoU)

7 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa In SADC, there are other roles as well…. Bandwidth is very expensive! The NREN as “bandwidth consortium” Negotiates affordable Internet access for its member institutions; Volume discounts special “holy cow” deals; lobbying government and regulators, e.g. for relaxed VSAT license conditions Share cost of connection to Géant enable participation in collaborative international research projects Be part of the global networked research community Develop ICT human capacity

8 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa The South African situation TENET is the “bandwidth consortium” that arranges general Internet access (via TELKOM) SANReN: The SA Government is creating an NREN Department of Science and Technology (DST) Driven by needs of “big e-science” projects VLBI, ALICE Project, tropical medicine Will connect to Géant; will not provide general Internet access All TENET institutions will connect, either directly or via a SANReN/TENET gateway “Connectable” institutions in other countries welcome EC very supportive In place by 1Q2006 Dedicated connection to Géant (1 Gb/s?) TENET is assisting the DST

9 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa Why is bandwidth expensive? (1) Africans bear the full cost of the long-haul connectivity to Europe and USA That’s just how the Internet developed! Johnny-come-lately pays to connect! Many countries still have a single incumbent operator protected by restrictive license regulations SADC lacks EU-type regional authority Regional bodies that do exist tend to be associations of vested interests, like the telcos and the regulators. Consumer interests are not represented. Cross-border connectivity is tightly regulated for the benefit of the incumbents.

10 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa Why is bandwidth expensive? (2) “Shareholders’ Club” model for financing submarine cables prevents competitive access Clubs are private, are not incorporated as accounting entities, and are very secretive about costs. SA’s SNO has no landing rights for traffic from SAT-3 cable There is healthy competition to provide international connectivity via satellite (VSAT), but VSAT bandwidth is inherently much more costly to provide Requires each site to install a large dish ($45,000) Prices between $2,50 and $4,00 per kb/s (one-way) per month Latency is always over 500 ms Not feasible for high bandwidths (over 100 Mb/s) Result: Pricing for cable connectivity is not cost-related Price pitched to just compete with VSAT

11 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa The University of Witwatersrand 11.3 Mb/s Internet access Cost breakdown Appox. unit cost ($ per kb/s per month)$4.00 Carrier transit cost in UK7 % Long haul to UK (via SAT-3 cable) cost63 % Transport and peering within South Africa30 %

12 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa The University of Swaziland 192 kb/s Internet access Cost breakdown Appox. unit cost ($ per kb/s per month)$ Carrier transit in UK2.5 % Long haul to UK (via SAT-3 cable)21.0 % Transport and peering within South Africa10.0 % Trans-border link: S African half-circuit25.0 % Trans-border link: Swazi half-circuit41 5 %

13 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa New deployments of optical fibre In many SADC countries: this is driven by Electrical power providers, who need fibre-connectivity for managing their distribution grids; and Cellular telephony operators, whose customer base has far outstripped that of the traditional fixed-line operators. In many countries, the cellular operators (including MTN and Vodacom) have more extensive fibre backbones than the incumbent telco. Reading: Backbone telecommunications infrastructure development initiatives in Southern and East Africa. Final report. NEPAD e- Africa Commission. August The proposed role of the AAU: Enabling member and associated institutions to access more bandwidth at lower cost. Report of The Association of African Universities (AAU) ICT and bandwidth Initiative. FF Tusubira and Nora K Mulira. August 2005.

14 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa The SARUA initiative Southern African Regional Universities Association Launched in March public universities in the SADC region 26 have access to SAT-3 20 use VSAT connectivity SARUA envisages adopting a TENET-like agency model Negotiating a common VSAT deal for SARUA universities Lobbying, where necessary, for relaxation of VSAT license restrictions and/or fees Achieving a shared connection to Géant / Internet2 Pursuing capacity develop programs throughout the region

15 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa What are the prospects for a SADC RREN? Option 1: VSAT bandwidth consortium Common VSAT service provider Participation contingent upon VSAT license condition in your country Shared connections to general Internet and to Géant (or Internet2) from common base-station in Israel, Europe or USA. Option 2: Terrestrial connectivity Much tougher to realise, because of Multiple cross-border links to establish Multiple licenses in multiple administrations required to land and transit traffic Multiple operators involved. No uniform prices in the region. Competitive sub-marine cable connectivity some years away Both: Important capacity development work

16 CODATA Workshop on Strategies for Permanent Access to Scientific Information in Southern Africa