BUILDING A REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE FUTURE OF INTERNET IN LATIN AMERICA

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BUILDING A REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE FOR THE FUTURE OF INTERNET IN LATIN AMERICA A report to the CAF La:n American Development Bank Telecom Advisory Services, LLC FUTURECOM Rio de Janeiro, October 24, 2013

LATIN AMERICA EXHIBITS A MEDIUM LEVEL OF INTERNET ADOPTION, WITH 256 MILLION USERS BY THE END OF 2012, GROWING AT 24% PER YEAR LATIN AMERICA: USERS OF INTERNET ( 000 000) CAGR Penetration 3,9 5,6 8,9 11,3 14,4 16,6 20,8 23,8 26,5 31,0 34,4 39,4 44,7 24,7 % Source: ITU (2012) 2

BY THE END OF 2012, THE TRAFFIC GENERATED BY THE TOP COUNTRIES COMPRISES 1,300 MILLION GIGABYTES PER MONTH, GROWING AT 42% PER YEAR LATIN AMERICA: TOTAL INTERNET TRAFFIC (*) (in petabytes per month) COUNTRY CAGR Argentina 32 % Brazil 47 % Chile 40 % Colombia 42 % Mexico 42 % Panama 16 % Peru 37 % Venezuela 25 % TOTAL 42 % Note: 1 PB= 1 Petabyte= 10^15 = 1 million Gigabytes (*) The countries included represent 85% of total Latin American traffic Source: Traffic model developed by TAS 3

FIBER OPTIC DEPLOYMENT HAS ALLOWED TO INCREASE THE INTERNATIONAL TRANSIT CAPACITY WITHIN AND OUT OF THE REGION ARG BRA CHI COL ECU MEX PAN PER VEN CA AMX-1 X X X PAN-AM X X X X X X Sam-1 X X X X X X X SAC/LAN X X X X X X PAC X X X ARCOS X X X X X MAYA-1 X X X X PCCS X X X Globe Net X X X Americas II X X UNASUR X X Bicentenario X Atlantis II X X ARSAT X X X COPACO X X RED DORSAL X X X Source; Telegeography, TAS analysis Note: only included cables that connect more than one country within Latin America. Internexa X X X X X X X X X Redca X X 4

HOWEVER, THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE INTERCONNECTION INFRASTRUCTURE IN LATIN AMERICA HAS BEEN UNEVEN SO FAR LATIN AMERICA: EXISTING IXPs COUNTRY Number of IXPs Situation Argentina 11 Plans to deploy 10 more Bolivia 0 3 planned Brasil 31 Plans to deploy 16 more Chile 8 Private peering Colombia 1 Only local traffic Ecuador 2 Only local traffic El Salvador 1 Partially operating Guatemala 0 No plans as of yet Honduras 0 No plans as of yet México 0 1 under construction Nicaragua 1 Hosted at a university Panamá 1 Informal agreement among ISPs Paraguay 1 Incumbent not interconnected Perú 2 One operated by consortium Venezuela 0 Planned Source: Compiled by TAS 5

AS A RESULT, A LARGE PORTION OF LATIN AMERICAN INTERNET TRAFFIC IS STILL INTERCONNECTING IN THE UNITED STATES LATIN AMERICA: INTERNET TRAFFIC FLOWS Source: Traffic model developed by TAS 6

APPROXIMATELY 14% OF INTERNET TRAFFIC TOWARD THE UNITED STATES COMPRISES COMMUNICATION FLOWS AMONG LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES LATIN AMERICA: INTERNATIONAL TRAFFIC FLOWS BY MONTH (2012) (In Petabytes) OUTGOING TRAFFIC Argentina Brasil Chile Colombia Mexico Panama Peru Venezuela TOTAL Argentina 27 3 0.9 1 0 1.4 0 33.3 Brasil 11 3 1.1 1.2 0.01 0.9 0.6 17.8 Chile 6 8 1.2 0.6 0.09 2 0.03 17.9 INCOMING TRAFFIC Colombia 2 4 1 2.3 2.48 0.8 0.6 13.2 Mexico 1 6 1 1.6 0.35 0.5 0.4 10.8 Panama 0 0 0 1.6 0.3 0.2 0.4 2.5 Peru 5 4 2 1.4 0.4 0.02 0.5 13.3 Venezuela 1 4 0.5 3.4 1.5 0.7 0.6 11.7 Otros 43 305 54 37.2 193.3 18 24 43 717.5 TOTAL 83 359 65 48 199 22.3 30 50 856.3 Latam Average 31 % 15 % 16 % 23 % 4 % 16 % 21 % 15 % 14 % Source: Traffic model developed by TAS 7

AN ADDITIONAL 20% OF TRAFFIC IS ORIENTED TOWARD ACCESSING INTERNATIONAL CONTENT ALTHOUGH, IN SOME CASES, THIS IS ALREADY HOSTED IN THE REGION TO REDUCE ACCESS COSTS LATIN AMERICA: MONTHLY FLOWS OF CONTENT TRAFFIC (2012) (en Petabytes) Country Total Traffic International Content Traffic Percentage Argentina 127 38 30 % Brasil 652 130 20 % Chile 109 33 30 % Colombia 75 22 29 % México 235 12 5 % Panamá 25 7 28 % Perú 47 14 30 % Venezuela 56 3 5 % TOTAL 1,326 253.3 20 % Source: Traffic model developed by TAS 8

DUE TO THE UNEVEN DEVELOPMENT OF IXPs, LATIN AMERICA IS INCURRING HIGH INTERNATIONAL DATA TRANSPORT COSTS: US$ 1,800 MILLION PER YEAR Country LATIN AMERICA: ANNUAL INTERNET TRANSIT COSTS (en US$) Cost to access international content Cost to support Latam traffic Cost for international traffic (ex Latam) Total Argentina US$ 0 US$ 37.10 US$ 87.65 US$ 124.75 Bolivia US$ 41.16 US$ 20.58 US$ 27.48 US$ 89.22 Brasil US$ 0 US$ 89.53 US$ 509.43 US$ 598. 96 Colombia US$ 89.48 US$ 45.89 US$ 147.98 US$ 283. 35 Costa Rica US$ 18.66 US$ 3.65 US$ 38.52 US$ 60.83 El Salvador US$ 18.66 US$ 3.65 US$ 38.52 US$ 60.83 Guatemala US$ 8.11 US$ 1.59 US$ 16.75 US$ 26.45 Honduras US$ 10.61 US$ 2.07 US$ 21.88 US$ 34.56 Mexico US$ 7.47 US$ 2.05 US$ 138.76 US$ 148.28 Nicaragua US$ 6.03 US$ 1.18 US$ 12.44 US$ 19.65 Panama US$ 5.57 US$ 11.4 US$ 50.1 US$ 67.07 Paraguay US$ 44.45 US$ 22.23 US$ 29.63 US$ 96.31 Peru US$ 100.74 US$ 29.83 US$ 55.68 US$ 186.25 TOTAL US$ 350.94 US$ 270.75 US$ 1,174.82 US$ 1,796.51 Source:TAS analysis 9

THESE COSTS ARE TRANSFERRED TO BROADBAND RETAIL PRICES, WHICH IMPOSES LIMITS TO THE AFFORDABILITY IN LARGE PORTIONS OF THE POPULATION LATIN AMERICA: EXAMPLES OF LIMITED AFFORDABILITY Monthly Tariff of Basic Fixed Broadband Plan (in US$) Monthly Raiff of Medium Offer of fixed broadband plan (in US$) Income decils that can acquire broadband service Number of households that cannot acquire broadband Argentina Brazil Colombia Ecuador Mexico US$ 23.99 US$ 14.75 US$ 20.77 US$ 20.16 US$ 14.58 (*) US$ 25.94 US$ 29.65 US$ 22.61 US$ 27.89 US$ 29.16 6 to 10 4 to 10 7 to 10 9 and 10 3 to 10 6,555,000 15,300,000 5,940,000 3,040,000 6,320,000 (*) Tariff of cable TV operators with limited geographic coverage Source: Katz y Callorda. Mobile broadband affordability in the bottom of the pyramid in Latin America. GSMA, 2013 10

THIS SITUATION REQUIRES THE URGENT DEPLOYMENT OF IXPs TO REDUCE THE INTERNATIONAL TRANSIT COSTS INTERNET VALUE CHAIN Access Devices Last Mile connectivit y Internet Service Provider Regional / International Transport Interconnection Point Regional / International Transport Internet Service Provider Cost to Accessing Interntaional Content Cost for intra Latam traffic Cost for international traffic ex Latam Total US$ 350.94 million US$ 270.75 million US$ 1,174.82 million US$ 1,796.51 million Accelerate the localization of international content in Latin America to reduce access costs Increase the percentage of traffic interconnected in the region to reduce transit costs DEPLOY MORE IXPs IN LATIN AMERICA 11

TRAFFIC ANALYSIS IDENTIFIES TWO COMMUNITIES OF INTEREST ( CLUSTERS ): NORTH AMERICA/ANDEAN/CENTRAL AMERICA AND SOURTHERN CONE INTERCONNECTED BY PERU LATIN AMERICA: PERCENTAGE OF OUTGOING INTERNET TRAFFIC OUTGOING TRAFFIC Mexico Panamá Colombia Venezuela Peru Chile Argentina Brazil México 0.0% 1.6% 3.4% 0.8% 1.5% 2.0% 1.2% 1.7% Panamá 0.1% 0.0% 3.4% 0.8% 0.5% 0.1% 0.0% 0.0% INCOMING TRAFFIC Colombia 1.1% 11.1% 0.0% 11.0% 2.8% 1.7% 2.0% 1.1% Venezuela 0.2% 3.1% 7.0% 0.0% 2.1% 0.8% 1.6% 1.1% Peru 0.2% 0.1% 2.8% 1.0% 0.0% 3.6% 6.0% 1.0% Chile 0.3% 0.4% 2.5% 0.1% 6.6% 0.0% 6.8% 2.3% Argentina 0.5% 0.0% 1.9% 0.0% 4.7% 4.8% 0.0% 7.6% Brazil 0.6% 0.1% 2.2% 1.3% 3.0% 4.1% 12.7% 0.0% Otros países 97% 84% 77% 85% 79% 83% 70% 85% Noth America / Andean / Central America (*) Interconnection Point Southern Cone (*) includes countries with logical pairing such as Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua y Ecuador Source: TAS analysis 12

WE RECOMMEND DEPLOYING THREE INTERREGIONAL POINTS AND A NETWORK OF DOMESTIC POINTS IN SEVERAL COUNTRIES TO COMPLEMENT THE EXISTING INFRASTRUCTURE IXP REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE Deployed IXP Interregional IXP National IXP Regional Domestic IXP While the recommendations do not include an interregional IXP in the southern cone, the Buenos Aires NAP (deployed within CABASE) represents a de facto interregional IXP given that it provides interconnection to ANTEL and is currently undergoing tests with Brazil and Chile. Fuente: Análisis TAS 13

THE CONNECTIVITY AMONG THE INTERREGIONAL NODES OF PANAMA, PERU AND BRAZIL WOULD BE FULFILLED BY MULTIPLE TERRESTRIAL NETWORKS AND SUBMARINE CABLES REGIONAL TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE REDES%TERRESTRES% SIEPAC& INTERNEXA& RED&DORSAL/TELEBRAS& COPACO/TELEBRAS& COPACO/ENTEL& ARSAT/TELEBRAS& CABLES%SUBMARINOS% SAM$1& SAC& PANAM& ARCOS& PCCS& BRAZIL$US& SACS& SEABRAS& BRICS&CABLE& ATLANTIS&2& GLOBENET& EUROPE& AFRICA& AFRICA/& ASIA& Source: Compiled by TAS from Submarine Cable Almanac; ISA Internexa; Siepac; Interviews 14

THE INITIAL CAPITAL INVESTMENT FOR THE DEPLOYMENT OF IXP IS ESTIMATED BETWEEN US$ 47.4 Y US$ 61.0 MILLION Level Business Model Ecample Interregional National 1 National 2 National 3 LATIN AMERICA: INITIAL IXP INVESTMENT (CAPEX) Interconnection and colocation 2national centers (interconnection and colocation) Regional centers (interconnection) 1 national center (Interconnection and colocation) Regional centers (interconnection) 1 national center (Interconnection and colocation) CAPEX (1) (in US$ 000 000) Applicable to other locations Panama US$ 9.607 Brazil (Fortaleza), Peru (Chilca) Total CAPEX (en US$ 000 000) US$ 28.8 32.0 Colombia US$ 3.463 Mexico US$ 6.9 11.0 Bolivia US$ 1.384 Peru (nacional) US$ 2.8 6.0 Costa Rica US$ 1.487 Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Paraguay, Asunción US$ 8.9 12.0 Total US$15.941 US$ 47.4 61.0 Source: TAS analysis Note (1): CAPEX does not include land costs, but it includes civil engineering costs 15

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE RECOMMENDED INFRASTRUCTURE IS DERIVED FROM THE REDUCTION IN TRANSIT COSTS AND LATENCY ECONOMIC IMPACT OF IXP DEPLOYMENT + GDP impact as a result of increase in broadband speed Download broadband speed Increase of speed with constant pricing Price reduction of similar products + Retail broadband pricing GDP impact as a result of an increase in broadband penetration 16

THE AGGREGATED ECONOMIC BENEFIT OF DEPLOYING THE RECOMMENDED IXP WILL RANGE BETWEEN US$ 3.5 Y US$4.4 BILLION Download broadband speed GDP impact as a result of increase in broadband speed Increase of speed with constant pricing Price reduction of similar products Retail broadband pricing US$ 915 million GDP impact as a result of an increase in broadband penetration AGGREGATE IMPACT US$ 3.557-4.472 million The smaller impact is based on the fact that a single population benefits from both affordability and speed of access On the other hand, the highest impact scenario takes place if the benefits accrue to different populations US$ 3.557 million Source: TAS analysis 17

TELECOM ADVISORY SERVICES, LLC For more informa:on contact: Raul Katz, raul.katz@teleadvs.com, +1 (845) 868-1653 Telecom Advisory Services LLC 182 S:ssing Road Stanfordville, New York 12581 USA