Sunday 2 October 2011

Lebanon: Will The World's Worst Web Get Better?


Gulf News filed a Reuters report today on moves to improve Lebanon's internet access. The headline alone made me laugh, "Lebanon unveils faster, cheaper internet amid political bickering'. That's one of those 'Man found dead in cemetry' headlines. Nothing happens in Lebanon without political bickering.

Lebanon, as those who know it will attest, is a beautiful country of rich soil, glorious countryside and home to a fascinatingly diverse people capable of great cleverness. Beirut can be sophisticated, sexy as hell and enormous fun. It is also home to crushing poverty. And it's all strung together with public infrastructure that sometimes defies belief. From the rocky power grid (power cuts are still commonplace) through to the state of the roads, you're often left wondering quite how so much physical, intellectual and financial wealth sits alongside such tottering examples of failed governance.

Listening to the Ministerial addresses to ArabNet is helpful to reaching an understanding of this, I find.

Lebanon's internet is cited in today's story as being the 'world's worst... the country is always much lower down the rankings than many less developed nations such as Afghanistan or Burkina Faso.' The story goes on to recount, in shocked tones, how a 1 Mbps connection in Lebanon costs Dhs 279!!!

Errr. Hello, GN? That's about what we're paying here in the UAE. A one meg DSL line is Dhs249 a month, 2 Mbps costs a whopping Dhs349 a month and you'll pay Dhs549 for a 16 meg line. If you want the highest available speed from Etisalat, you can get a 30 Mbps 'Al Shamil' line for a mere Dhs699 a month. That's $191.5 to you.

I'm not even going to mention that the Japanese home gets an average 60 Mbps line at a cost of $0.27 per megabit month. Not even thinking about going there. Oh no.

Now the promises being made (because the story is, tragically, predicated on a promise not an actual physical delivery of service) are that Lebanon will get a minimum access speed of 1 Mbps for $16 per month. That would bring it in line with markets like the UK. I genuinely hope the promise (made to Reuters by Lebanese telecoms minister Nicola Sehnawi) comes through - although Ogero might have something to say about that - for two reasons. First and foremost so my friends in Lebanon can stop gnashing their teeth and throwing laptops against the wall in frustration. The selfish second reason is that it would add pressure on the TRA to finally act and bring down the ridulous broadband prices here in the UAE - prices that are undoubtedly a key factor contributing to hindering the adoption, use and the growth of the economic opportunity derived from technology in the UAE today.


(The image at the top of the post is one of my favourite things, BTW. It's the first sketch of 'the Internet')


by
Enhanced by Zemanta

5 comments:

Unknown said...

You're absolutely right. I'm always speaking out at how ridiculously expensive broadband subscriptions are here in the UAE. The TRA has way to much control on everything. They're blocking other international ISP's from working here and they're controlling the price of everything. How can it be a free market if every price change has to be approved by a government authority in an environment that supposedly contains competition!

Internet subscription prices are extremely exorbitant here. Now Etisalat is offering LTE as well, God knows how much they'll charge for that.

I think the general policy is: Get as much cash as you can from these people, milk them till the absolute end till it becomes blatantly shameful, then bring down the prices a little and make it seem like it's a gift from the carriers and the government to the people and "guests" of this nation.

Anonymous said...

"I'm not even going to mention that the Japanese home gets an average 60 Mbps line at a cost of $0.27 per megabit month."

What's a megabit month?

Surely it can't mean 27c per megabit. If it does it would cost me AED 144,000 a month (average 600MB per day).

Alexander said...

Luke

A megabit month is per megabit of access charged per monthly billing cycle - so 1Mbit ADSL would be 1 mbit month.

The japanese are, therefore, paying $16 for their 60 meg access...

Anonymous said...

Thanks. Stupid me. Makes sense now.

Anonymous said...

Although to be fair, it would make more sense if one said "$0.27 per megabit per second, per month"

More "per"s than a small swedish town though.....

From The Dungeons

Book Marketing And McNabb's Theory Of Multitouch

(Photo credit: Wikipedia ) I clearly want to tell the world about A Decent Bomber . This is perfectly natural, it's my latest...