Nigeria
may fail to meet its broadband target due to lapses in the management of
frequency spectrum, which has paved the way for under-utilisation of this
scarce national resource.
The
Federal Government, under the Goodluck Jonathan administration, had set the
target of 80 per cent growth penetration in the 3G services by 2018, in line
with the National Broadband Plan.
“But
this target will remain unattainable because many high net worth individuals,
agencies of government as well as telecommunications networks, without
requisite capacity to roll out services, are sitting on huge amounts of
frequency spectrum,” a top executive in one of the four major
telecommunications companies, has said.
Recall
that Bitflux Communications, a relatively inexperienced player in the market,
was awarded the 2.3GHz frequency spectrum for the provision of wholesale
wireless broadband services in February 2014. The telecoms company has yet to
roll out broadband service across the country.
The
source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, also stated that because of the
poor management of frequency spectrum, Nigeria was bound to miss the June 2017
deadline set by the International Telecommunication Union for a global
switchover of television signals from analogue to digital transmission.
Nigeria
had earlier failed to meet the June 17, 2015 deadline, which was been extended
to June 2017.
He
said, “This is because the Federal Government has not released the N60bn to the
National Broadcasting Commission, which was long earmarked as the cost of the
digital Switchover process in the country. The migration is expected to free up
requisite spectrum under the control of the NBC, providing the needed capacity
for telecoms operators to roll out broadband services.
“Until
MTN came forward, the NBC kept postponing the proposed auctioning of the 2.6GHz
spectrum band, a situation that was frustrating the business plans of
prospective investors seeking to play critical roles in the Nigeria’s broadband
market.
“Even at that, the NCC is now claiming that
the spectrum was not part of 2.6GHz band it auctioned to MTN.”
Meanwhile,
the Chief Executive Officer/Managing Director at Airtel Nigeria, Segun
Ogunsanya, said due to explosive growth in mobile data traffic, telecoms operators
required more spectrums to support this growth.
“There
is an urgent need to expedite the release of frequency to operators in order to
facilitate industry development and enable the nation to meet its broadband
targets,” he said.
A
former Corporate Services Executive at MTN, Wale Goodluck, said, “Our industry
is spectrum hungry. Spectrum is the oxygen of this business.”
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