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Africa’s Fastest Internet Speed Still Ranks Below Global Average

Africa’s Fastest Internet Speed Still Ranks Below Global Average

Africa has continued to lag behind when it comes to mobile internet speed, falling way behind other regions. The 2022 Speedtest Global Index published by Ookla, a US-based internet speed analysis firm, noted that not even the country with Africa’s top mobile internet speed is close to the global average.

The survey, reported by Quartz, said the continent’s fastest internet country, South Africa, failed to meet the global average internet speed.

South Africa has an average mobile internet download speed of 68.9 megabits per second (mbps), which significantly falls short of the global average mobile download speed of 77.7 mbps.

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According to the report, the Southern Africa country ranks 46th globally, and in Africa it is followed by Togo, Mauritius, Morocco, Botswana at download speeds.

The world’s top mobile internet speeds are in the United Arab Emirates, South Korea, Qatar, Bulgaria, and Norway which have speeds of 258 mbps, 242.3 mbps, 241.7 mbps, 216.6 mbps, and 191.3 mbps respectively.

Internet speed in Africa and 5G

Quartz, using Ookla’s report, looked at how Africa’s mobile internet’s speed is doing in the era of 5G. With some countries like Nigeria already rolling out the fifth generation network infrastructure, it is expected that internet speed will improve significantly enough to compete at the top in global ranking.

The report said that Ookla also compared mobile internet performance in the second quarter of 2022 on modern chipsets across 21 mobile network operators, with results showing that median download speeds were as low as 2.89 mbps in Guinea and as high as 65.95 mbps in South Africa.

“We can clearly see the impact that 5G has on overall performance as South African operators came first thanks to having 5G networks in place. MTN South Africa was well ahead of the rest of operators, despite facing challenges with load shedding, with median download speed of 65.95 mbps, followed by Vodacom South Africa with a median download speed of 48.70 mbps. If we take 5G out of the equation, Safaricom Kenya was the fastest operator among the analyzed operators,” Sylwia Kechiche, principal industry analyst, enterprise at Ookla says in the report.

It further noted that while more than 13 nations are testing 5G networks, over 40 nations are yet to lay down groundwork for the creation of 5G spectrums. This could keep them locked out of the emerging global digital economy, which demands reliable and fast internet.

For instance, Airtel Uganda has Africa’s highest upload median mobile speed at 14.84 mbps while Guinea’s MTN Guinea has the lowest—1.55 mbps, meaning the continent is lagging behind in the social media video revolution.

Quartz, quoting the survey, pointed out factors contributing to slow internet speed in Africa, including internet outages and shutdowns.

It said that during the second quarter of 2022, users reported 46,810 incidents of internet outage for Vodacom and 34,882 for MTN which is present in 17 African countries.

“There were two top issues reported: no signal and no mobile internet: lack of signal accounted for the majority (46%) of Vodacom’s reported outages, followed by inability to access mobile internet (36%),” the study says. But that was reversed for MTN where majority of the hitches were related to mobile internet (43%), followed by no signal (40%). “Noteworthy is the fact that there were reports of total blackouts: 7% for Vodacom and 5% for MTN.”

Close to half of the countries in Africa are notorious for internet censorship, with blackouts, total shutdowns, social media restrictions and throttling causing the continent to lose billions of dollars in the past four years, the report said.

The survey further notes that mobile internet performance is dependent on the reliability of the underlying infrastructure “such as access to fiber backhaul and reliable power supply, spectrum availability as well as end-user devices.”

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