MCT: When three isn’t a crowd
The Malaysia-Cambodia-Thailand (MCT) undersea cable project will raise the digital game of the whole ASEAN region. Find out from three telcos how the ocean floor will reveal its buried treasures.
The Malaysia-Cambodia-Thailand (MCT) undersea cable project is an ambitious foray into expanding Internet coverage and boosting speeds for three power players in the ASEAN. To find out more about the 1,300-km scheme, we spoke to senior executives from Telekom Malaysia, Telcotech in Cambodia, and the Thai telco Symphony Communication.
A tale of three cities
“The basic thing for any development in this region is that you need to be connected,” says the GM of Telekom Malaysia, Mohamad Izani Bin Karim, when explaining the rationale behind the project. With a pool of affordable labor, ASEAN has competitive advantages and great potential, but “you need to be connected to bring investors into the region,” he states. “It’s no longer a luxury – it’s a basic necessity for any industry looking to house a hub in this region.”
To this end, the MCT cable system is designed to provide connectivity between Cherating in Malaysia and Rayong in Thailand, and run a branching unit from the main trunk into Sihanoukville in Cambodia. But the scheme is bigger than three cities; in fact, what it connects into makes it bigger than the three nations that give the project its name: “There are also terrestrial links into Laos, and even Myanmar. And then the existing network that links to Thailand and Vietnam,” says Izani, “So from that perspective, it helps make ASEAN an attractive region for investors.” Given the strong GDP growth in the region – Myanmar, for example, has recorded a very impressive 8.4 percent growth so far this year – a state of the art digital infrastructure can, and is necessary to, unlock the door to sustained growth in the ASEAN.
Supornchai Chotputtikul, Executive VP for Thailand’s Symphony Communication, mentions that for Thailand, the MCT system is necessary to meet the increasingly digital lifestyle of its 68 million people, where mobile penetration is more than 100 percent: “Thailand has 80 million mobile subscribers. MCT will help meet this demand and support our economy, which is one of the objectives that our government is pushing right now.”
Cambodia is less connected than either of its larger neighbors, with less than 40 percent of the nation’s 15 million people using the Internet, but with mobile as the preferred access path. Prakash Velayudhan, the CTO for Telcotech in Cambodia, points out that MCT represents the nation’s first cable, and will be a game changer because high-speed access on a larger capacity network will be affordable, “This will help us to develop the market by reducing costs for end users,” he explains. “It will also help us by improving our connectivity to the rest of the world. And overall it’s expected to boost the economy.”
The figures back up what Prakash says: “Research by the World Economic Forum holds that a 10 percent increase in broadband connectivity correlates to a 1.4 percent increase in GDP in emerging economies.“
Going broader
Izani is well aware of the strategic importance of a connected Cambodia: “Currently, Cambodia is very much reliant on its terrestrial network, and they need to access Thailand or Vietnam to get out to the rest of the world. So from that perspective, [Cambodia] is far behind the other countries in this region,” he acknowledges. “MCT was built because Cambodia needs to be connected.” Prakash goes on to explain how using the networks of Symphony Communication and TM will benefit Cambodia, “We will be able to, first, better integrate with ASEAN, and second, have a better reach outside ASEAN.”
That’s not to say that Cambodia’s economy hasn’t performed extremely well since the start of the century, averaging an impressive 7.9 percent growth in GDP over the past 15 years. In 2015 and so far this year, the nation has enjoyed sustained growth at 7 percent, more than double the global average. Further robust growth, though, will still be led by traditional industries like garments, footwear, and construction. However, this isn’t enough – Cambodia needs to diversify its economy to raise incomes and create the type of jobs that will lay the foundation of a digital economy. The MCT undersea cable project is one tool that will help it do that.
Though showing slower GDP growth than Cambodia at a still respectable 4.2 percent, Malaysia offers the region significant geographical advantages. Symphony’s Chotputtikul, for example, refers to Malaysia as “one of the gateways to the world”, because it joins the east and west and opens up north Asia, Europe, and North America to the ASEAN. “[Malaysia] will help the region expand the value of our trade and our technology, and enhance our attractiveness to the rest of the world,” says Chotputtikul.
Choose your partners strategically
Already possessing experience in the undersea cable field, Telekom Malaysia is a strategic heavyweight in the scheme, a fact that Chotputtikul recognizes, “We believe that the potential of TM is interesting for the whole region, because the Malaysian government has very close ties with Singapore, and they have existing connectivity to the rest of the world, including to Singapore itself.” Though Symphony Communication and Telcotech are relatively new to the undersea cable arena, Telcotech has some experience working with TM on the Asia-America Gateway project. Prakash is confident that the partnership benefits Cambodia directly as well as the region as a whole: “In terms of our partnership with Symphony Communication and TM, we’re seeing improvements in our terrestrial market.”
Chotputtikul agrees, mentioning that from Thailand’s perspective, Telcotech (via Ezecom) and TM open up key routes to two of Asia’s economic giants: Singapore and Hong Kong. “If you want to go to Singapore, TM is a good partner. We can ask for a competitive price, because our partnership has set up a team for pricing and charging back and forth. Similarly, if we want opportunities from Thailand to Hong Kong, Ezecom Data would be the first partner we would consider.”
A partnership on this scale will always be a complex beast, but TM’s Izani is clear on the two major seeds of success. “It’s important to understand the needs of your partners and for these partners to have a common goal.” The three men are confident that the undersea cable sector will grow, both replacing legacy systems and rolling out new solutions to cope with the region’s increasing hunger for bandwidth: “In Japan, people are talking about 1 gigabit to the home. In Malaysia we’re moving towards 100 Mbps, 500 Mbps,” says Izani. “In Cambodia, they have about 40 gigs of capacity, and that’s expected to grow fivefold. So, obviously there will be a need for additional capacity to get all this Internet bandwidth.”
Partnerships also extend to the right vendors. It’s the second time that TM has worked with Huawei Marine, and Izani is clear on the importance of a collaborative approach: “They have actually gone beyond what they were supposed to do in terms of helping our partners in Cambodia and Thailand.”
The importance of the MCT scheme in the ASEAN region cannot be underestimated, especially as the world is entering a time of rapid digitalization that relies on ubiquitous, high-speed broadband as the foundation of economic digitalization.
Without digital transformation, economic stagnation is inevitable. Without collaboration, building a strong digital infrastructure is impossible. As Prakash puts it, “The submarine cable business is not an investment for one company alone. It’s the result of good partnerships at the regional level and international level.”
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