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Wireless Ghana
Wireless Ghana


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Dec 2nd, 2007 - 01:14:13 | Boateng Ebenezer
3. Project Financing Approach
The Wireless Ghana project started with next to no capital. We used a small amount of personal
monies to buy some wireless equipment and play around with it. After hundreds of tests with
antennas in different locations we were able to bridge a 5km link. When we were able to prove that
the technology was possible we were able to attract the first organization to purchase a node. Our
startup costs were mainly aimed at proving the viability of our venture. As a community wireless
network we started with two nodes, the bare minimum of a network, and have steadily expanded
one at a time throughout the first phase of the project.
While the cost of starting up the wireless network was minimal, without the existing resources in
place there would be no Community Wireless Network. The service that attracts people to buy a
node on the network is Internet access. That came from our umbrella organization. Community
Based Libraries and Information Technology is the facilitating NGO that supports the everyday
logistics of Wireless Ghana. The offices, volunteer staffing, and a variety of resources (Internet
access, spare computer parts, etc.) are based at the Apirede Community Resource Center (ACRC),
CBLit's initial, flagship community resource center. Wireless Ghana is heavily attached to CBLit
and ACRC. The existing resources at ACRC have made the Wireless Ghana project possible.
Having proven the possibility of the project with the existing resources a main financial obstacle to
expansion is the cost of adding a node. We saw in the previous section that each node cost roughly
USD $500 to build and install. Imagine if everyone in developed countries had to pay that much
money, directly, in order to obtain access to communication and information. In Ghana’s rural
villages that amount of money is a high price to pay. It is out of the reach of most individual and
explains why the majority of the network nodes are owned by larger organizations.
The largest obstacle, however, in the financial approach, is the service fee for access to the Internet.
It is one thing to pay a high price for a one-time installation of equipment, but when those high
prices are a constant expense there is a real obstacle toward progress. It is this problem that the
idea of an open network, where anybody can competitively offer services, attempts to address. In
the next section we will look at how Satellite Internet services in remote, rural areas are nearly
unusable due to their exorbitant costs, and how that is not only a function of the technology, but
also of the local policy.
3.1 Financing Access for Service - Internet
A major drawback to telecommunications access in developing countries is the cost of services.
The backbone for services, chiefly Internet access, in a developing area with limited-to-no existing
communication infrastructure, is often a satellite feed. Satellite feeds are expensive, both in terms
of the one-time investment in equipment and the continuing service, as compared to most landed
forms of access (DSL, Cable, telephone line). Prices for satellite access in developed nations are
significantly better, but often those ISPs are reluctant to work in places like West Africa, for fear of
financial instability. Table 3.1.1 outlines the fee structures of an ISP in Ghana, Accelon, versus
those of an ISP in Serbia and Montenegro, VoySat. These prices are a snapshot from Fe



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