Bankole
Orimisan
THE Association of Telecommunication Companies of
Nigeria has attributed 70 per cent of the challenges facing operators in the
country’s telecommunications sector to unreliable public electricity.
Delivering a keynote address at the association’s broadband investment
summit in Lagos yesterday, the President of ATCON, Mr. Titi Omo-Ettu, said
power problem has been responsible for high cost of running businesses, which,
according to him, has kicked some operators in the sector out of businesses and
with little only big operators being able to survive the tides.
The
investment forum was the major outing of the implementation of ATCON’s roadmap
to sustaining the gains of the last decade and preparing for the next during
which the industry is expected to provide access to large population using
broadband as toll.
Omo-Ettu, who stated that, getting the current government policies
targeted at boosting power generation is critical to the attainment of
ubiquitous broadband deployment to galvanise the nation’s economic development,
maintained that, although operators face other challenges such as technical
issues, poor access to financing, among others, power presents the greatest
challenge to the broadband growth.
Industry
experts have said that out of over 40 million Nigerians already connected to
the Internet; only about 12 million representing around 3 per cent are
connected to broadband internet access.
According
to Omo-Ettu, “When we weighed the problems which confront our industry as a
component of the Nigerian economy, all the issues of low technical skills, poor
access to financing, barrier to investment, and all of that, all constitute 30
per cent. It is in finding solution to this 30 per cent that we are gathered to
brainstorm and cart a path.
“The over
70 per cent, which is constituted by a poor access to reliable public
electricity that refuses to go away can only be left for government to work at
sorting out.”
Speaking
on the theme of the two-day investment summit: “Broadband as enabler to
connecting the next 50 million Telecom users in Nigeria”, Omo-Ettu stated that,
having achieved tremendous growth in subscriber base in the last 10 years,
broadband should be used to connect the next 50 million subscribers in the next
10 years.
“We have
already said we are now done with number of connected lines as index of our
industry development. We want to shift emphasis to using number of our citizens
who have access to telecommunications index of planning and developing our
market.
In the
same vein, the Chief Executive Officer of Main One cable Company, Ms. Funke
Opeke, who also recognised power problem as one of the greatest challenges to
broadband penetration, however, noted that, cost of broadband has dropped by up
to 75 per cent in the last one years of international submarine cables landing
a year ago.
She added that, “By granting
the right of ways to telecom investors at reduced cost, operators would be able
to deploy more broadband at reduced cost to Nigerian both at wholesale and at
retail levels.”
No comments:
Post a Comment