Nigeria’s aspiration for universal Internet coverage and broadband expansion has received a boost with the materialisation of a $100 million loan from the Indian government.
The facility, arranged by the EXIM Bank of India, followed a close collaboration between the India High Commission in Nigeria and the Federal Ministry of Communications. The deal was facilitated by the immediate past Minister of Communications, Adebayo Shittu, who had promised a 70 per cent broadband penetration by 2021.
The facility is to accelerate the deployment of solar-based mobile telephone sites in the country’s vast rural areas. Ministry officials privy to details of the plan said no fewer than 1,000 locations could be built in a year once the deal is officially sealed.
A document yesterday said the grant was for financing of the nation’s rural broadband network and deployment of robust masts to complement alternative power sources.
The plan is hinged on government’s determination to extend telephone services to local communities at relatively affordable cost while ensuring that the bottlenecks experienced in urban areas were minimised.
Just last week in Lagos, the Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), Prof. Umar Danbatta, had called for fresh investments in the sector. He noted that while the current portfolio of $68 billion investment in Nigeria was huge, it was, however, by no means adequate for one of the fastest growing telecommunications markets in the world.
While acknowledging the efforts of service providers investment-wise, Danbatta urged them to double the move in the next 10 years.
Earlier this year, Shittu had disclosed that government was desirous of fact-tracking the implementation of the National Broadband Roadmap by rapidly deploying less-expensive telecommunications masts in the rural and remote areas. The strategy, he explained, was to provide access to telephone services and engender rapid broadband penetration in hitherto inaccessible regions of the country.
His hope was premised on the $100 million facility from the Asian nation
Indeed, latest statistics from the NCC indicate that broadband subscription was 63.2 million, while actual broadband penetration increased to 33.13 per cent last month.