Angola and Namibia have taken a concrete step towards deeper digital integration, with Angola Telecom and Telecom Namibia signing a memorandum of understanding to strengthen cross-border connectivity and expand access to international broadband capacity.
The agreement, signed during ANGOTIC 2026 in Luanda, aims to improve network resilience, expand broadband access and strengthen regional telecommunications infrastructure through multiple interconnection points between the two countries.
The partnership focuses on increasing transmission capacity and improving connectivity through existing international infrastructure, including the Equiano and SARSSy cable systems.
The signing received high-level political backing. Angola’s Minister of Telecommunications, Information Technologies and Social Communication, Mário da Silva Oliveira, and Namibia’s Minister of Information and Communication Technology, Emma Theofelus, witnessed the ceremony, underlining the strategic importance both governments place on digital infrastructure.
For investors, the agreement signals growing demand for resilient backbone networks across Southern Africa. As digital services, cloud computing and data consumption continue to expand, countries are increasingly seeking greater control over international traffic routes and connectivity infrastructure.
The agreement also fits within a broader regional effort to diversify international connectivity routes and reduce dependence on a limited number of transmission paths.
Telecom Namibia plays a key role in Namibia’s international connectivity ecosystem through infrastructure linked to Google’s Equiano subsea cable landing at Swakopmund. Angola Telecom has also secured transmission capacity connected to Equiano and the Southern Africa Regional Satellite and Submarine System (SARSSy), helping strengthen regional traffic flows.
For operators, additional capacity and route diversity improve resilience and reduce the risk of service disruption. For enterprises and wholesale customers, they can also support lower transmission costs and more reliable access to global digital networks.
The partnership supports the development of a wider west coast digital corridor, linking subsea cable systems, terrestrial fibre networks and landing stations into a more integrated regional platform. Over time, this could improve connectivity between Southern African markets and major international internet gateways while supporting growth in cloud services, data centres and cross-border digital trade.
For Angola, the agreement aligns with broader efforts to modernise digital infrastructure and strengthen the country’s role in regional connectivity. For Namibia, it reinforces its position as an increasingly important landing point and transit hub for international traffic along Africa’s Atlantic coast.
The broader message is that digital infrastructure is becoming a strategic economic asset rather than simply a telecommunications service. Governments are increasingly treating connectivity in the same way they view transport, energy and logistics infrastructure.
For investors, that creates opportunities across backbone fibre networks, landing stations, wholesale bandwidth services and digital infrastructure platforms.
The next key milestone will be the conversion of the memorandum into operational capacity, commercial agreements and measurable traffic growth across the Angola-Namibia corridor.
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