Tshwane’s public Wi-Fi build programme is the largest of its kind in South Africa, new research has confirmed.
According to data by research firm BMI-TechKnowledge, the City of Tshwane’s free Wi-Fi build programme ranks as the largest in the country.
“Tshwane is the biggest in terms of users, footprint and access points. The deployments in the Western Cape for the provincial government are the next,” said BMI-T associate telecoms consultant Christopher Geerdts.
The organisation tracks public and private sector Wi-Fi hotspots and found that South African government deployments were on an expansion trend over the last year to 18 months.
“In terms of government-sponsored deployments, there are currently around 1 800 active hotspots in South Africa, with the bulk of these being concentrated in Project Isizwe’s Tshwane deployment, and projects in the Western Cape,” Geerdts said.
However, BMI-T warned that free Wi-Fi risks being unsustainable.
“Someone ultimately has to pay for these services. Public projects can be all or part sponsored by national, provincial or local government and/or the private sector. Project Isizwe received donated bandwidth from Neotel. Other Internet service providers and telcos could also contribute, especially if there is some corporate social investment capital to be gained from this,” Geerdts argued.
In Tshwane, Project Isizwe registered 720 000 unique Wi-Fi users who are granted 250MB of data per day. The non-governmental organisation said that only 7% of users reach their cap.
In the Western Cape, public Wi-Fi is provided in Mitchell’s Plain and Khayelitsha where users have a 3GB cap.
However, Geerdts envisioned a model where Wi-Fi Internet access is affordable rather than free in the longer term.
“Overall we think that the country may be looking for an affordable model more than a free model. Customers are investing in smartphones and there is evidence they will pay for data if the pricing is improved and coverage and payment methods improve.” — Fin24