Grenada Internet Service Providers are touting the benefits the Grenadian Internet Exchange Point is delivering to their networks and their customers.
A release from the Caribbean Network Operators Group (CaribNOG), issued during their regional meeting in Grenada, quotedsenior representatives from LIME and Columbus Communications describing the improvements in local Internet traffic routing and local content delivery experienced since the Grenada IXP was launched in May 2011.
An Internet exchange point, or IXP, is a physical facility that allows ISPs to exchange domestic Internet traffic locally instead of through more distant facilities in the US or Europe. Of the 250 IXPs in the world, most are located in developed countries, wth onlysix operational in the Caribbean. Trinidad and Tobago is among a handful of Caribbean countries now in the process of setting up local exchange points.
James Pitt, acting General Manager at LIME Grenada, told the CaribNOG gathering in Grenada, “The Grenada Internet Exchange Point and recently implemented DNS Root server copy are important steps in a collaborative effort between LIME, Columbus and the Grenada NTRC to improve the efficiency and robustness Internet services in Grenada.”
Pitt described lower network latency, reduced average-per-bit-delivery costs, improved traffic routing and greater incentive to serve local content, as some of the key reasons Grenada has implemented an Internet exchange, the release said.
Columbus Communications Regional Manager Network Services, Brent McIntosh, supported his LIME counterpart. According to McIntosh, both Columbus and LIME benefit from the Grenada IXP.
“The collaboration between LIME and Flow to establish the Grenada IXP in May 2011, and then to migrate it to a neutral facility at the Grenada NTRC this year, is testament to our willingness to work together in the interest of developing the Grenada market,” McIntosh said.
Speaking to CaribNOG’s technical audience of over 100 computer network specialists and enthusiasts drawn from across the Caribbean, he saidthe collaboration does not end with the Grenada exchange point. Both organisations will be encouraging and supporting the development of local content that can take advantage of the local IXP, the release said.
CaribNOG coordinator Bevil Wooding, an Internet strategist at the US-based Internet-support Packet Clearing House (PCH), commended the Grenada ISPs and encouraged local content providers to take full advantage of the local IXP and DNS Root server.
“Opportunity beckons Grenada as it builds out its domestic Internet ecosystem. Companies, schools and entrepreneurs can now provide new local services based on bandwidth-intensive applications like video and audio streaming, VoIP, domestic data backup, new e-government services, distance learning; e-health, and other Internet-based applications that can leverage the local IXP,” Wooding said.
The Caribbean Telecommunications Union (CTU) and PCH, have been promoting the proliferation of Internet exchange points in the Caribbean. The initiative has received support from the CTU’s member governments and, increasingly, cooperation from regional Internet Service Providers.