The external storage market in the Middle East and Africa (MEA) region suffered a year-on-year decline in the last quarter of 2012, according to the latest data from International Data Corporation (IDC), the premier global provider of market intelligence, advisory services, and events for the information technology, telecom, and consumer technology markets. Referencing its EMEA Quarterly Disk Storage Systems Tracker, the research firm today announced that external storage revenue in the MEA region plummeted year on year in Q4 2012 to total $272 million, with terabyte capacity rising slightly by a modest 8 per cent over the same period.
''The decline can be attributed to a considerable reduction in the number of projects in the MEA region involving large-scale deployments when compared to previous years," says Swapna Subramani, senior research analyst at IDC Middle East, Africa, and Turkey.
"However, we remain bullish on the external storage trend moving forward owing to the overall resilience of the market, which will be bolstered by new projects and government initiatives in the health and education sectors."
In the Middle East, Saudi Arabia was the only country to register strong year-on-year growth, expanding 60 per cent in Q4 2012. "This growth was driven by several projects in the Kingdom's telecommunications and education sectors," says Subramani.
The UAE external storage market experienced a 3 per cent year-on-year decline in revenue during Q4 2012, while in contrast Qatar posted modest growth of 9 per cent, fueled by demand from the government and education sectors. "IDC expects to see further growth within the government, automotive, financial services, and petrochemicals sectors, among others in the region," says Subramani.
The North Africa region (including Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia) experienced a continued slump in Q4 2012 as a result of political unrest and spiralling inflation. South Africa also faced a decline in Q4 2012 owing to the seasonal/cyclical trend of infrastructure uptake in the country. Nigeria was the bright spot within the African market, posting healthy double-digit growth that can be attributed to deals in the financial and telecommunications sectors. ''Enterprise deals in key verticals will continue to play a pivotal role in shaping trends in the African storage market,'' says Subramani.
From a protocol perspective, Infiniband once again experienced tremendous year-on-year growth. Telecom-industry investments helped drive double-digit growth for NAS and DAS protocols, while RAID dominated redundancy with over 99 per cent share of all shipped models. Mid-range devices dominated the storage class with over 58 per cent share of external storage devices.
From a vendor perspective, EMC retained its top spot in the market with over 48 per cent share on the back of sizeable projects in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, and Nigeria. IBM secured second place with just over 14 per cent share, although the vendor suffered a decline in revenue year on year. Netapp placed third with just over 10 per cent share, while HP followed closely behind with just under 10 per cent share of the MEA market. Dell witnessed a stark decline in revenue with 4 per cent share in the last quarter of 2012.
© Emirates 24|7 2013




















