Broadband Partnership of the Americas
In April 2012, President Obama announced the creation of the Broadband Partnership of the Americas, an effort set to improve internet access across the Latin America and Caribbean region. The President was in Cartagena, Colombia, for the Sixth Summit of the Americas.
The Broadband Partnership for the Americas (BPA) is designed to improve access to broadband and the Internet and other communications technologies in the Americas. It will serve as a voluntary and flexible framework through which the governments of the Western Hemisphere, multilateral organizations, the donor community and the private sector can collaborate to increase access to broadband and the Internet across the Americas.
The BPA is supported by USAID and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and will be managed by the Global Broadband and Innovations Program, of which Integra is an implementing partner.
Eric Postel, Assistant Administrator for USAID’s Economic Growth, Agriculture and Trade Bureau, said in a joint statement with the FCC, “We are very excited about this rich partnering opportunity within our own hemisphere- where we can mobilize public and private resources toward achieving more equitable access to broadband and the Internet as a key contributor to development.”
The financial and technical resources mobilized through the BPA will be used to help interested countries advance a range of information technology initiatives, including:
– developing and implementing national broadband strategies;
– creating or upgrading universal service funds to finance the expansion of mobile and broadband technologies to rural communities;
– improving international and regional connectivity by linking existing broadband networks;
– collaborating on a regional effort to harmonize the use of digital spectrum; and
– sharing best practices.
For more information, please visit GBI’s Broadband Partnership of the Americas page.