Published
4 years agoon
As the target to achieve at least 70 per cent broadband penetration in Nigeria remains a priority to stakeholders in the country, Isa Pantami, the minister of communications and digital economy has reveased 11 areas of progress recorded so far.
The Minister made the revelation while delivering his keynote address at the Virtual Structured Engagement with Key Stakeholders in the Nigerian Telecom & ICT Sector on the New National Broadband Plan 2020 – 2025 held on Thursday by the Association of Telecommunication Companies of Nigeria (ATCON)
The minister recalled that in recognition of the tremendous economic growth opportunities afforded by the deployment of broadband technologies, he inaugurated a Presidential Committee on the 16th of December 2019 to draft the Nigerian National Broadband Plan (NNBP) for Nigeria (2020-2025).
The Committee was made up of a wide range of stakeholders- Nigerians with expertise across the public and private sector.
The NNBP was unveiled and launched by President Muhammadu Buhari on the 19th of March, 2020. Mr President also provided the mandate that was included in the Plan, according to him.
The Plan outlines a trajectory for significantly improving the broadband penetration in Nigeria over a period of 5 years. It replaced the initial Broadband Plan which expired in 2018.
The new broadband plan seeks to deliver data download speeds across Nigeria at a minimum of 25Mbps in urban areas, and 10Mbps in rural areas, with effective coverage available to at least 90% of the population and penetration rate of 70% by 2025 at a price not more than N390 per 1GB of data (2% of median income or 1% of minimum wage).
The Plan targets the deployment of nationwide fibre coverage to reach all State Capitals, and provision of a point of presence in at least 90% of Local Government Headquarters.
It also targets tertiary educational institutions, major hospitals in each state and fibre connectivity at statutory rates of N145/meter for Right of Way (RoW).
In order to achieve these targets, the plan focused on recommendations in 4 focus areas, namely: Infrastructure, Policy, Demand Drivers and Funding/Incentives.
According to the communications and digital economy minister, the following represent progress areas since the unveiling of the broadband plan:
According to Pantami, the journey so far is encouraging and significant progress has been made in realizing some of the targets set in the new Broadband Plan.
Noting that most of the challenges are being addressed, Pantami however, hinted participants at the event that there is a critical need for deliberate efforts by all stakeholders towards ensuring that the targets set in this plan are realized.