Dear Colleagues,

On 20 May, 2014, ICANN announced that it had begun the process of allocating 
the remaining blocks of IPv4 address space to the five Regional Internet 
Registries (RIR). The trigger for this was LACNIC's pool of IPv4 address space 
reaching a /9 ( 8,388,606 addresses). LACNIC has now moved into Phase 1 of its 
community-defined IPv4 Exhaustion Plan. APNIC exhausted its supply of IPv4 
address space in 2011 and the RIPE NCC followed quickly in 2012. In April 2014, 
ARIN announced that it had reached phase 4 of its IPv4 Exhaustion Plan. 

"The Internet technical community has been preparing for this phase in global 
IPv4 exhaustion for the last few years and we expect the community-developed 
"Global Policy for Post Exhaustion IPv4 Allocation Mechanisms by the IANA" to 
kick-in shortly," says Adiel A. Akplogan, CEO of AFRINIC. "As we move into this 
new phase of the Internet's evolution, we cannot ignore the fact that total 
exhaustion of the global IPv4 pool will occur in the very near future. Although 
AFRINIC's supply of IPv4 address space has not reached critically low levels 
yet, we cannot predict how long our supplies will last. Existing and emerging 
networks will face scalability issues unless they are made IPv6 ready to ensure 
long-term network growth and global connectivity. It is now imperative that all 
African stakeholders ensure that IPv6 is deployed on their networks, that 
devices are IPv6 enabled and our content is available over IPv6 immediately so 
that we remain connected to the global IPv6 Internet and so that our millions 
of future Internet users can get online."

The community is encouraged to contribute to discussions on the Policy 
Discussion Mailing list and during the upcoming AFRINIC Meeting to voice their 
opinion on all aspects of regional and global Internet number resource 
allocation policies.

AFRINIC has been leading the effort throughout Africa to promote and support 
IPv6 deployment since 2005 through outreach, education, free training courses 
and provision of an IPv6 test bed. Find out more about our IPv6 Programme. 

Read Adiel A. Akplogan's recent statement on the urgent need for all African 
stakeholders to deploy IPv6.


Regards,


Mr Ashil Oogarah
Technical Communications writer/editor, AFRINIC Ltd.
t: +230 403 51 00 | f: +230 466 6758 | tt: @afrinic | w: www.afrinic.net
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