Azam Digital Broadcast is deploying NEC XON’s Hybrid Storage Solution (HSS) for regulated and uninterrupted power supply to its broadcast tower network throughout Tanzania.
“Broadcast is a competitive business,” says Ahmed H Abdallah, CEO of Azam Digital Broadcast, “which means our service must be top-notch. We pride ourselves on a quality, affordable and uninterrupted service with strong infrastructure to support the transmitters and the services to back it up. That’s what we get from NEC XON.”
Azam Digital Broadcast is part of the Bakhresa Group, an industrial conglomerate from Tanzania with operations in 11 countries, including South Africa. It operates across the food and beverage, packaging, logistics, marine passenger services, petroleum, entertainment and other sectors.
“The AzamTV brand is very popular in Tanzania, as it is elsewhere in Africa,” says Ally Yahya, NEC XON Key Account Executive in Tanzania. “The transmitters are crucial, sensitive equipment that have a huge impact on the services the brand delivers to its customers. Providing remote monitoring data improves the resilience of the network, alerts Azam’s engineers as soon as there is a potential problem, and enables remote, escalated backup and support from our own engineers in-country as well as at our central facility in South Africa. That has a significantly positive impact on overheads, total cost of ownership (TCO) and service delivery.”
Abdallah says a host of real-time data on generator fuel levels and other critical information provisions for close monitoring of the generators and on-site grid availability which moderates runtime and has knock-on effects such as lower fuel consumption, planned truck roll to sites that are difficult to reach, and cuts generator parts maintenance and replacement frequency.
Fast and linear charge characteristics, as well as the small footprint, were crucial advantages that led to Azam selecting NEC XON’s design from the competitive bid process.
“High cycle Li-Ion batteries also contribute to the high return on the investment and the significantly lower Opex,” says Yahya. “The high roundtrip efficiency of Li-Ion batteries ensures that no energy is wasted, which makes it the ideal solution for generator optimisations.”
The project, which initially experienced supply chain effects associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, is being deployed in three phases. The HSS units have been deployed at 11 of the more than 25 total tower locations. The second phase of seven sites begins with the third phase following once it is complete.
“We received a lot of support from the NEC XON management when COVID initially interrupted the supply chain,” says Abdallah. “COVID was an act beyond our control, but together we have created a strategy that is resulting in a smooth order and delivery process.”
* Article first published on itweb.africa
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NEC XON
NEC XON has provided custom ICT and related integration services since 1996 for government, telcos, mobile operators, network service providers, and enterprise organisations throughout Africa. The business’s four clusters: Communications, Infrastructure, Safety, and Digital Solutions, contain 10 integrated business units that help customers transform their operations through compute, networking, security, energy, surveillance, analytics, infrastructure, platforms, and digital solutions. It provides comprehensive managed services, project management, professional services, maintenance and support. NEC XON is NEC Corporation’s African business, as a result of joining XON and NEC Africa. NEC XON is a level 1-certified broad-based black economic empowerment (B-BBEE) business through its partnership with Kapela Capital since 2010. The organisation operates in 54 African countries, with a footprint in 16, and regional headquarters in South, East, and West Africa.
Discover more at www.nec.xon.co.za.