Angola Cables, Uniti Partnership to Benefit African Enterprises

Angola Cables, Uniti Partnership to Benefit African Enterprises

Connecting Africa (Informa)
Connecting Africa (Informa)Jun 12, 2026

Why It Matters

The alliance reduces latency and transit costs for African enterprises, accelerating the continent’s digital economy and widening access to global markets.

Key Takeaways

  • Angola Cables integrates WACS, SACS, MONET with Uniti's 386k km U.S. fiber
  • Landlocked SADC firms gain lower wholesale prices via alternative routing
  • Multi‑gigabyte links enable fintech, agri‑tech, logistics to access U.S. markets
  • Hybrid‑cloud models help African data stay sovereign while leveraging global clouds

Pulse Analysis

The Angola Cables‑Uniti Wholesale partnership marks a watershed moment for trans‑Atlantic connectivity. By marrying Angola Cables' extensive submarine assets—WACS, SACS and MONET—with Uniti's sprawling 386,000‑kilometer U.S. fiber backbone, the joint venture creates a seamless, high‑capacity corridor that spans five continents. This integrated network promises multi‑gigabit pathways, dark fiber, and colocation services, delivering the kind of resilient, low‑latency infrastructure that multinational corporations demand when expanding into emerging markets.

For African enterprises, especially those in data‑heavy sectors such as fintech, agritech and logistics, the new route translates into tangible operational advantages. Lower wholesale IP costs and diversified routing options reduce reliance on third‑party transit providers, cutting both expense and latency. The ability to tap into high‑bandwidth, sovereign‑compliant connections enables firms to adopt hybrid‑cloud architectures, keep sensitive data within regional jurisdictions, and still leverage the scalability of global cloud platforms. In land‑locked SADC nations, where connectivity has historically been a bottleneck, the deal could catalyze a surge in digital services, e‑commerce, and cross‑border trade.

While submarine capacity around Africa has exploded with projects like PEACE, 2Africa, DARE‑1 and Equiano, the continent’s real challenge lies in extending that bandwidth inland. Experts warn that without robust terrestrial fiber—exemplified by initiatives from Liquid Intelligent Technologies and other regional players—the promise of high‑speed internet will remain confined to coastal hubs. The Angola‑Uniti alliance underscores the need for coordinated investment in both subsea and land‑based infrastructure, regulatory harmonization, and public‑private partnerships to bridge the digital divide and sustain Africa’s rapid digital transformation.

Angola Cables, Uniti partnership to benefit African enterprises

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