⚡ Key Takeaways

Algeria gains two complementary submarine cable connections in 2026: Medusa (480 Tbps, 24 fibre pairs, €342M EU-backed, Algiers and Collo landings scheduled by end-2026) and Africa-1 (connecting France, UAE, Kenya, Pakistan). Together they create Algeria’s first genuine sub-sea path redundancy and distinct routing profiles — Medusa for Europe, Africa-1 for Gulf and East Africa.

Bottom Line: Algerian enterprise IT directors should audit ISP contracts for renewal dates in 2026-2027, commission a latency benchmark study for cloud-dependent applications, and engage Algerie Telecom on Medusa-based pricing frameworks before the Algiers landing activates commercially.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High

The Medusa Algiers landing (scheduled end-2026) and Africa-1 directly affect bandwidth costs, cloud region selection economics, and ISP contract leverage for every Algerian enterprise with cloud or international SaaS dependencies. This is not a distant infrastructure development — it lands within the 2026 contract renewal cycle for many enterprises.
Action Timeline
Immediate

ISP contract review, latency benchmarking, and transit pricing negotiations should begin now, 12+ months before the Medusa Algiers landing, to position enterprises for renegotiation leverage when the cable activates commercially.
Key Stakeholders
CTOs, IT Directors, network architects at Algerian enterprises, ARPCE, Algerie Telecom
Decision Type
Tactical

Cloud routing strategy and ISP contract management are tactical infrastructure decisions with direct and measurable cost impact. The strategic layer (data sovereignty, Law 18-07 compliance) frames which workloads belong in which architecture tier.
Priority Level
High

Enterprises that lock in 24-36 month connectivity contracts at current pre-Medusa pricing in late 2026 will miss a structural cost reduction opportunity. The priority is high because the action window is defined and time-bounded.

Quick Take: Algerian enterprise IT directors should audit their ISP contracts for renewal dates in 2026-2027, commission a latency benchmark study for their cloud-dependent applications, and engage Algerie Telecom on Medusa-based pricing frameworks before the Algiers landing activates. The dual-cable infrastructure is the first genuine path-redundancy Algeria has had — capture its value in your architecture and your contracts, not just as background context.

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