Latin America’s Digital Infrastructure at a Turning Point

June 25, 2026

Latin America’s Digital Infrastructure at a Turning Point

Regulations, fragmentation, connectivity, energy, and artificial intelligence were the focus of the closing session of LACNIC 45 during a panel discussion on the challenges of digital infrastructure in Latin America and the Caribbean.

LACNIC 45 closed with a discussion on one of the central issues for the future of the Internet in Latin America and the Caribbean: what kind of digital infrastructure does the region need to support expanding connectivity, data demands, and new workloads associated with artificial intelligence?

The panel titled A Turning Point for Digital Infrastructure: Data Centers, Submarine Cables, IXPs, and ISPs brought together four specialists with complementary perspectives: Evandro Varonil, Vice President of the LACNIC Board and representative of Brazilian ISPs through ABRINT; Giovanni King, CEO of BlueNap Americas and Chair of the Caribbean Data Centers Association; Pablo Ruidiaz, Executive Director of InteRed Panama; and Carlos Pazmiño, Head of Submarine Cable Systems at Telconet, Ecuador. Carmen Denis, Director of Internet Exchange Service Yucatán and member of the LACNIC Board, moderated the discussion.

Carmen opened the conversation with a direct question: “If you had to name a single challenge currently limiting the Internet’s potential in your sector, what would it be?” The responses were revealing, not only because of what the panelists said but also because of the commonalities among them.

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Varonil did not hesitate and his answer was regulations. King pointed to fragmentation in the Caribbean, a region surrounded by undersea cables but divided into dozens of small economies that struggle to negotiate individually. Ruidiaz echoed this diagnosis for Central America, where similar fragmentation prevents the subregion’s 50 million inhabitants from presenting themselves as a unified market. And Pazmiño, who had originally intended to reply “regulations,” chose instead to name the second issue on his list: the inability to think collectively as a region, the “us first, not our neighbor” mentality that ultimately deprives everyone of infrastructure.

The Brazilian Model

The first part of the panel focused on the case of Brazil, which accounts for more than 9,000 of the 14,000 autonomous systems registered in Latin America. According to Evandro Varonil, this is the result of more than 30 years of sustained public policy.

In the mid-1990s, the Brazilian Ministry of Communications legally separated Internet service providers from telecommunications companies. While telephone companies controlled the physical infrastructure—the cables and the last mile—ISPs could operate as independent legal entities without having to be telecommunications carriers. This separation, known as Rule 4, allowed thousands of small and medium-sized providers to flourish in a country of continental dimensions.

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