Another milestone for Paratus Group

Gateway in Angola
The new gateway will provide low Earth orbit satellite services to several countries in the region.
Staff Reporter - Paratus Group has concluded a multi-year agreement with global telecommunications provider OneWeb to build a gateway in Angola’s capital, Luanda.
The gateway will be operational in the second half of 2023, OneWeb said in a statement on its website.
This new gateway will provide low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite services to several countries in the region and will facilitate the provision of high-speed, low-latency connectivity to businesses, government, schools, clinics, and hospitals in under-serviced areas. This is the first of several planned OneWeb gateways in Africa, the company said.
According to the chief technical officer of Paratus Group, Rolf Mendelsohn: “With this agreement, we are taking another giant step in realising our plan to use Angola as a communications hub for the region. Being selected as the preferred partner to install the gateway in Angola for OneWeb reaffirms our superior capability in developing world-class telecommunications infrastructure in Africa.”
NETWORK HUB
The latest agreement, combined with the recent launch of the Paratus fibre connection to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the inauguration of the Paratus Group’s data centres in Zambia and Namibia, as well as coverage in all of the Angolan provinces, means that Paratus has the requisite infrastructure to provide a highly sophisticated network hub in Angola and one that allows for expansion beyond its borders.
Michele Franci, chief of delivery and operations at OneWeb, said: “When considering the size and persistence of the digital divide, and the connectivity barriers for businesses operating in rural or remote areas, the need for LEO satellite options are obvious.
“On a global scale, mobile internet penetration is still only 50% and many of those who remain offline reside in Africa. By installing OneWeb teleports linked to hundreds of LEO satellites, we can bridge that divide effectively and affordably.”
MEETING MARKET DEMANDS
OneWeb chose to partner with Paratus Angola because the group is rooted in Africa, Franci said.
“It totally understands and invests in meeting market demands; and because Paratus is committed to transforming African connectivity through exceptional digital infrastructure.”
The teleport will consist of 16 antennas and a network hosting facility, linking to OneWeb’s LEO infrastructure and thereby connecting Africa to the world and the world to Africa.