NCC Cites Power Shortage as Major Challenge of Telecoms Sector

Digital Industry Created Jobs, Increased Revenue - NCC

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has identified inadequate power supply as a critical challenge facing the telecommunications sector in Nigeria.

The Executive Vice Chairman, NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta said this during an oversight and fact-finding visit by the Nigerian Senate Committee on Communications in Abuja.

He noted that the cost of providing power, especially in the base stations, was high adding that the Commission was working hard to solve the challenge by recommending the use of sustainable energy sources to the telecommunications operators.

On the issue of security, vandalism and theft of equipment, Prof. Danbatta said there were delays in securing approvals for sites at the state level for new base stations as they were harassed by some Agencies.

According to him, the unfair taxes and billing levied on Telcos constitutes a setback to infrastructure deployment in the telecoms sector.

“Engagements are ongoing with different tiers of government and government agencies at Federal, State and Local Government levels,” he stated.

He urged the delegation to pave to ensure that there was money mobile industry that was Telco driven.

Danbatta said despite these challenges the commission has  recorded a lot of achievements, “the development of spectrum trading guidelines to enable operators in possession of un-utilised or under-utilised frequency spectrum to trade such limited assets in the secondary market place.”

On broadband penetration, he said that the Commission had implemented the Open Access Model for infrastructure development through the competitively selected Infrastructure Companies (InfraCos) called InfraCo project.

” InfraCo will provide, at a minimum, broadband fibre and connectivity to every LGA of the federation, totalling 774 points of Access (PoAs) with minimum speed of 10 Gbps, which will translate to at least, 28,902Km of fibre deployment in the next four years.”

A new Department of Research and Development was created to improve the synergy between the Commission and the Academia in the area of research and development with the active collaboration of the industry. This is with the aim to boost telecommunications-related researches in the country,” he said.

He said that as of 2017, the commission had activated the 2442 DO-NOT-DISTURB code initiative with fewer than 500 subscribers but presently has more than 30 million subscribers and counting.

“The commission’s second layer complaint toll-free line, 622, has also become a beehive of activities.” Danbatta added.

The Chairman, Senate Committee on Communications, Mrs Oluremi Tinubu, commended the NCC for the platinum category award that was recently awarded to the commission for exceptional organisation performance.

Tinubu expressed optimism that the telecommunications industry would see better days ahead, adding that so far she had experienced good service relationships with service providers.

“We will come again and that will be going to visit most of your sites and see how far you have gone with the 2020 budget and to also prepare us for 2021.We are also looking forward to the stakeholders’ conference that we want to have with the telecoms industries. I think it will be very good for us, which we have discussed,” she said.

Source: VON

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