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Nigeria - Telecoms, Mobile, Broadband and Forecasts

Publication Overview

This annual report provides a comprehensive overview of trends and developments in Nigeria’s telecommunications market. Subjects covered include:

  • Key statistics;
  • Market and industry overviews;
  • Government policies affecting the telecoms industry;
  • Market liberalisation and regulatory issues;
  • Major players (fixed, mobile and broadband);
  • Telecoms operators – privatisation, acquisitions, financial results, new licences;
  • Infrastructure development;
  • National fibre rollouts;
  • International submarine fibre optic cables;
  • Mobile voice and data markets, including 3G;
  • Internet development;
  • Broadband, including 3G mobile
  • Convergence (voice/data, fixed/wireless/mobile).
  • Average Revenue per User;
  • Mobile money transfer and m-banking.

Researcher:- Peter Lange
Current publication date:- February 2011 (10th Edition)
Next publication date:- February 2012

Executive Summary

Africa’s largest mobile market expected to reach 100 million subscribers

Nigeria is one of the biggest and fastest growing telecom markets in Africa, attracting huge amounts of foreign investment, and is yet standing at relatively low levels of market penetration. Far reaching liberalisation has led to hundreds of companies providing virtually all kinds of telecom and value-added services in an independently regulated market. After failing three times in the past, the privatisation of Nitel, the incumbent national telco, is scheduled to be finally completed in 2011.

The West African country has overtaken South Africa to become the continent’s largest mobile market with now over 85 million subscribers, and yet market penetration stands at only around 55% in early 2011. However, subscriber growth slowed significantly during 2009, partly as a result of the global economic crisis.

Much of the remaining addressable market is in the country’s rural areas where network rollouts and operations are expensive. This, in combination with declining ARPU levels, is forcing the networks to streamline their operations and to develop new revenue streams from services such as third generation mobile broadband, mobile payments/banking, and others. At the same time the operators are rolling out national fibre backbone networks to support the ever increasing demand for bandwidth.

Nigeria is also the most competitive fixed-line market in Africa, featuring a second national operator, (Globacom) and over 80 other companies licensed to provide fixed telephony services. The alternative carriers combined now provide over 95% of all fixed connections, the majority of which have been implemented using wireless technologies.

This gives the network operators the opportunity to also enter the lucrative mobile market under a new unified licensing regime and has helped them to secure hundreds of millions of US$ in investments from local and foreign investors.

Nitel’s monopoly on international fibre bandwidth via the SAT-3/WASC submarine cable system ended in 2009 when Globacom’s Glo-1 cable landed in the country. Additional submarine cables are scheduled to go online in 2011 and 2012. This is set to revolutionise the country’s underdeveloped Internet and broadband sector by reducing the cost of international bandwidth by up to 90%.

New powerful players from the fixed-wireless and mobile network operator camps have entered this market with 3G mobile and advanced wireless broadband services such as WiMAX. The Internet Protocol (IP)-based next generation networks currently being rolled out are enabling converged voice, data/Internet and video services.

VoIP is already carrying the bulk of Nigeria’s international voice traffic. Applications such as e-commerce, online banking and e-payments, e-health, e-learning and e-government are rapidly evolving.

This annual report contains a market overview and analysis, key statistics, regulatory issues, profiles of major players – MTN, Globacom, Bharti Airtel (formerly Zain), Visafone, EMTS, Nitel/M-Tel, Multi-Links, Starcomms, Reliance, M-Tel, Intercellular, among others – including financial results where available, and two scenario forecasts for the mobile market in 2012 and 2016.

Market highlights:

  • The largest mobile market and the most competitive fixed-line market in the region;
  • New competition in international fibre bandwidth is set to revolutionise the market;
  • Profiles of major players, including financial results;
  • Estimates for end-2011 and 2012 for fixed-line and Internet market;
  • Forecasts for mobile market to 2012 and 2016.

Estimated market penetration rates in Nigeria’s telecoms sector – end 2011

Market

Penetration rate

Mobile

58%

Internet

44%

Fixed

0.6%

(Source: BuddeComm based on various sources)

Table of Contents

  • 1. Key Statistics
  • 2. Telecommunications Market
    • 2.1 Background
    • 2.2 Mobile market
    • 2.3 Fixed-line and fixed-wireless market
    • 2.4 Internet and broadband market
    • 2.5 Telecom investments
  • 3. Regulatory Environment
    • 3.1 Overview
      • 3.1.1 Nigerian Communications Commission Decree (NCCD) 1992
      • 3.1.2 National Telecommunications Policy (NTP), 1995-2009
      • 3.1.3 Nigerian Communications Act of 2003
      • 3.1.4 West African common regulatory framework 2005
      • 3.1.5 Class Licence policy extension 2007
    • 3.2 Regulatory authority
      • 3.2.1 Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC)
    • 3.3 Key regulatory issues
      • 3.3.1 Interconnection
      • 3.3.2 Consumer protection, quality of service
      • 3.3.3 Environmental impact of telecom towers
      • 3.3.4 Infrastructure sharing
      • 3.3.5 No regulation on state level
      • 3.3.6 Universal service
      • 3.3.7 National emergency numbers
    • 3.4 Telecom sector liberalisation
      • 3.4.1 Globacom’s SNO licence
      • 3.4.2 Regional fixed-wireless access (FWA) licences
      • 3.4.3 International gateway licences
      • 3.4.4 Unified licensing regime since 2006
    • 3.5 The four attempts to privatise Nitel
      • 3.5.1 IPO
    • 3.6 Spectrum auctions
      • 3.6.1 3.5GHz
      • 3.6.2 800MHz
      • 3.6.3 450MHz
      • 3.6.4 3G mobile spectrum
      • 3.6.5 WiMAX spectrum
  • 4. Fixed Network Market
    • 4.1 Fixed-line market and infrastructure overview
      • 4.1.1 Fixed-line statistics
    • 4.2 Fixed network operators in Nigeria
      • 4.2.1 Unified licensing regime
      • 4.2.2 Nigerian Telecommunications Ltd (Nitel)
      • 4.2.3 Globacom Ltd
      • 4.2.4 VGC Communications, MTN
      • 4.2.5 National Long-Distance Operators (LDOs)
      • 4.2.6 Fixed-wireless network operators
  • 5. Telecommunications Infrastructure
    • 5.1 National fibre optic infrastructure
      • 5.1.1 Backbone networks
      • 5.1.2 Fibre to the Home (FttH)
    • 5.2 International infrastructure
      • 5.2.1 Submarine fibre
      • 5.2.2 Terrestrial fibre
      • 5.2.3 Satellite
  • 6. Internet Market
    • 6.1 Overview
    • 6.2 Internet statistics
    • 6.3 Limited availability of PCs
      • 6.3.1 Stimulus programs
    • 6.4 Public Internet access locations
      • 6.4.1 Mobile Internet Units (MIUs)
    • 6.5 Internet Exchange Points (IXP)
    • 6.6 Country code top level domain (ccTLD) administration
    • 6.7 ISP market
      • 6.7.1 Internet Service Providers Association of Nigeria (ISPAN)
      • 6.7.2 Selected ISPs
  • 7. Broadband Market
    • 7.1 Overview
    • 7.2 ADSL
    • 7.3 Wireless broadband
      • 7.3.1 Odu’a Telecom
      • 7.3.2 Swift Networks
      • 7.3.3 Startech Connection
      • 7.3.4 Cyberspace Network
      • 7.3.5 Nitel
      • 7.3.6 Netcom Africa
      • 7.3.7 MWEB Nigeria
      • 7.3.8 Gateway Communications
    • 7.4 WiFi
      • 7.4.1 Accelon, Internet Solutions
      • 7.4.2 Jigawa Broadband Access Network
      • 7.4.3 Polestar/5G WiFi network in Lagos
      • 7.4.4 NaijaWiFi
      • 7.4.5 Abuja WiFi, WiMAX
      • 7.4.6 Enugu
    • 7.5 WiMAX
    • 7.6 Mobile broadband
    • 7.7 Internet via satellite
      • 7.7.1 Direct-on-PC
      • 7.7.2 BroadbandDirect
      • 7.7.3 IP Direct
      • 7.7.4 MWEB Nigeria
      • 7.7.5 Other services
    • 7.8 Broadband over Powerlines (BPL)
  • 8. Digital Media / Digital Economy
    • 8.1 Convergence
      • 8.1.1 VoIP Internet telephony
      • 8.1.2 Internet TV
      • 8.1.3 Cable TV
      • 8.1.4 Next generation networks (NGN), Triple-play
    • 8.2 Digital Economy
      • 8.2.1 E-commerce, e-payments
      • 8.2.2 E-government
      • 8.2.3 E-health
      • 8.2.4 E-learning
      • 8.2.5 Electronic Crimes Bill
    • 8.3 Digital media
      • 8.3.1 Blogs
      • 8.3.2 Facebook
  • 9. Mobile Communications
    • 9.1 Overview of Nigeria’s mobile market
      • 9.1.1 Mobile statistics
    • 9.2 Regulatory issues
      • 9.2.1 GSM licence terms
      • 9.2.2 Interconnection
      • 9.2.3 Mobile tariffs
      • 9.2.4 International gateways
      • 9.2.5 Unified licensing regime brings new competition
      • 9.2.6 Universal service
      • 9.2.7 Mobile number portability
      • 9.2.8 Central equipment identity register
      • 9.2.9 Poor quality of service
      • 9.2.10 Registration of subscriber details
      • 9.2.11 Foreign ownership
    • 9.3 Major mobile operators
      • 9.3.1 MTN Nigeria
      • 9.3.2 Bharti Airtel (formerly Zain/Celtel Nigeria)
      • 9.3.3 Globacom
      • 9.3.4 M-Tel
      • 9.3.5 Unified service licensees
    • 9.4 Mobile data services
      • 9.4.1 SMS
      • 9.4.2 MMS
      • 9.4.3 GPRS, EDGE
      • 9.4.4 WAP
      • 9.4.5 CDMA2000 1x
      • 9.4.6 BlackBerry
      • 9.4.7 Mobile money transfer, m-banking
    • 9.5 Mobile TV
    • 9.6 3G
      • 9.6.1 Licensing
      • 9.6.2 Globacom
      • 9.6.3 Zain
      • 9.6.4 MTN
      • 9.6.5 CDMA EV-DO
    • 9.7 Satellite mobile
  • 10. Forecasts
    • 10.1 Forecasts – mobile subscribers – 2012; 2016
  • 11. Glossary of Abbreviations
  • Table 1 – Country statistics Nigeria – 2011
  • Table 2 – Fixed-line network statistics – November 2010
  • Table 3 – Internet provider statistics – November 2010
  • Table 4 – Internet user statistics – 2010
  • Table 5 – Mobile statistics – November 2010
  • Table 6 – National telecommunications authority
  • Table 7 – Financial bids for Nitel/M-Tel, first and second round – 2010
  • Table 8 – Fixed lines in service and teledensity – 1999 - 2012
  • Table 9 – Fixed and fixed-wireless lines by operator and market share – December 2009
  • Table 10 – Internet users and penetration rate – 2000 - 2012
  • Table 11 – Mobile subscribers and penetration rate – 1998 - 2011
  • Table 12 – Mobile subscribers by operator, technology – December 2009
  • Table 13 – MTN Nigeria ARPU – 2002 - 2010
  • Table 14 – Zain Nigeria ARPU – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 15 – Starcomms total and mobility/mobile subscribers – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 16 – Zain prepaid mobile data pricing – 2010
  • Table 17 – Forecast mobile subscribers – 2012; 2016
  • Exhibit 1 – Number of telecom licences by category – January 2011
  • Exhibit 2 – Regional FWA licensees
  • Exhibit 3 – New international submarine fibre optic cables in West Africa – 2011 - 2012
  • Exhibit 4 – Ownership battle – from EWN to Vee Networks to V-Mobile to Celtel/Zain to Bharti

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