Angola Cables and MEO Wholesale Boost Atlantic Connectivity

MEO Wholesale Solutions has entered a strategic partnership to strengthen the interconnection of MEO’s data center (DC) networks and expand their telecommunications services globally through Angola Cables’s international subsea cable and data center network.

The partnership aims to establish the basis for interconnecting the points of presence (PoP) between the MEO LDV data centers in Portugal and Angola Cables’s  AngoNAP Fortaleza DC in Brazil, using the South Atlantic ring of cables.  

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The agreement includes utilizing the infrastructure from the two entities to jointly develop solutions for the benefit of enterprise customers and global operators. The collaboration covers submarine cables, IP connectivity, and international PoP-to-PoP interconnection networks between data centers, essentially creating an Atlantic digital ecosystem between Portugal, Brazil, Africa, and the United States.

“Thanks to our network of submarine cables in the Atlantic and Angola Cables’s partner cables connecting the American continent to Lisbon in Portugal, we are effectively engineering a digital ‘super business corridor’ between the MEO Data Center in Portugal and the AngoNAP Fortaleza Data Center in Brazil,” said Samuel Carvalho, Chief Marketing Officer and Head of Global Solutions Design at Angola Cables.

Carvalho noted that the optical connection allows for the rapid transit of data and digital traffic from Europe, using Portugal as an entry and exit point to Brazil, the United States, and Africa, ensuring the swift delivery of content and services, which is especially advantageous for the many Portuguese-speaking communities on either side of the Atlantic.

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Ana Carla Sousa, Director of MEO Wholesale Solutions, believes the partnership is “a decisive step in strengthening MEO’s international connectivity that will support and consolidate Portugal as a digital hub of excellence in Europe”.

The Portuguese operator will now have access to a multi-connected Atlantic network, connecting Lisbon to 66 global data centers through Angola Cables’s backbone network, and access to 930 data centers and more than 500 cloud connection points, over a high-performance virtual network.

“Between us, there is also the intent to share business models, cooperate in the promotion of joint services, and identify synergistic opportunities for commercial exploration,” concluded Carvalho.