OADC announces US$500mn investment in Africa data centres
As part of the West Indian Ocean Cable Company’s (WIOCC), Open Access Data Centres (OADC) has announced a US$500mn investment to construct and operate a network of more than 20 world-class, carrier-neutral, GreenStar and Uptime Institute Tier III accredited data centres across Africa, optimised to serve the needs of the cloud provider and wholesale community.
OADC says it will deploy data centre facilities strategically throughout the continent, focusing on key locations for connectivity in each country and with each delivering an exceptional client experience - from initial contact to consultative development and deployment of future-proof solutions tailored to clients’ specific needs and to world-class, ISO-certified standards.
OADC’s Chief Commercial Officer, Kevin McLoughlin, explained: “We are really excited to be working in partnership with the vibrant wholesale community, including cloud and content providers, telcos and internet service providers (ISPs), helping them to expand their businesses into new territories and markets across Africa. With content moving ever closer to the edge of the network for improved availability and performance, a single high-capacity regional data centre in Africa is no longer sufficient.
“Instead, our clients increasingly require access to a network of high-quality, open-access, carrier-neutral data centres across multiple countries and cities; one that will sustain and enrich Africa’s digital ecosystem, supporting their needs for flexibility and scalability to meet whatever the future demands. This is exactly what we are putting in place, working in tandem with leading global organisations to support their deployment plans for Africa,” Kevin added.
OADC has already started construction of its first two data centre facilities, located in Africa’s largest markets: Nigeria and South Africa.
Constructing OADC Lagos
According to the provider, the first phase of OADC Lagos will be ready for clients from early 2022, and when fully operational the US$200mn, Tier III certified data centre aims to support a site power load of up to 20MW across more than 7,200 square metres of white space – sufficient for up to 3,275 racks and making it one of the largest facilities on the continent outside South Africa. In addition, the site power load is fully scalable to 40MW as market demand grows.
The Equiano submarine cable will be landing directly in the data centre, which is also close to all other major subsea cable landings in Lagos. This makes OADC Lagos the ideal location for companies looking to maximise uptime through direct access to international subsea connectivity, avoiding the costs and risks traditionally associated with vulnerable terrestrial backhaul links from facilities on Victoria Island.
OADC Durban
OADC’s Durban facility is also under construction and will house the cable landing for the Durban branch of the 2Africa submarine cable. It is also designed to Tier III standards to deliver the highest levels of flexibility, scalability and client service. OADC’s proximity to Durban CBD makes it ideally located to be a key component in Durban-based companies’ primary colocation and disaster recovery solutions.
In addition to offering direct and completely diverse international connectivity through the new 2Africa submarine cable, which will interconnect 33 countries in Africa, Europe, the Middle East, Pakistan and India. The initial phase of OADC Durban will be ready for clients in early 2022. When fully operational, the data centre will offer more than 2,200 square metres of white space, with a further 2,000 square metres of A-grade office space also available on-site.
A third OADC facility is being deployed in Mogadishu, Somalia housing the cable landing for the Mogadishu branch of the 2Africa submarine cable and offering a range of colocation services to domestic and international businesses. OADC Mogadishu will be open to clients before the end of 2022.
All of the OADC facilities aim to operate as fully open-access, carrier-neutral data centres, supporting cloud providers and the international wholesale community in extending their businesses further into Africa. All major fibre network providers will be present in the facilities, and new dedicated diverse fibre routes will be available to existing data centres and internet exchange points (IXPs).