NCC, Abuja
|
Broadband companies - Tier
II telecoms operators have urged the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC)
to save the industry from imminent collapse.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
They
also warned that factors crippling their operations could also derail the
National Broadband Plan (NBP) of the federal government, if not addressed.
The
operators made this known when they visited Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta,
executive vice chairman of the NCC, in Abuja recently. The operators therefore
asked the NCC, to take immediate and decisive steps to avert the looming threat
of strangulation, which its members currently face.
In
the delegation were Mr. Godfrey Efeurhobo, managing director, Smile
Communications; David Venn, managing director, Spectranet; Mr. Osondu Nwokoro,
director Regulatory and External Affairs of nTel; and Mr. Chuma Okoye, chief
commercial officer, Swift Networks.
They
warned the regulator of a looming systemic industry failure which will have
catastrophic effect on the socio-economic development of the country. According
to them, the industry is in a situation where all operators are finding it
difficult to justify the required investment case for additional capital
expenditure (capex) for network capacity expansion to improve quality of service
to customers.
They
further noted that the network operating expenditure (opex) of operations have
sky rocketed in the last 15 months by over 85% with revenues remaining
relatively flat. Most operators, they lamented, are currently struggling with
meeting obligations to their suppliers particularly network vendors, tower
firms and servicing loan obligations.
This
worrisome trend, they noted, extend to even some of the Tier I Operators.
According to them, a storm is raging in the industry which if unchecked, will
result in the collapse of key players in the industry.
“This
is because the domino effect of bankruptcy of any of the Tier I or Tier II
Operators on the entire ecosystem particularly, banking, employment, corporate
and SMEs constitutes a major threat to the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan
(ERGP) of the current administration.
Such
bankruptcy and consequent collapse will also substantially lessen competition
with its attendant deleterious impact on consumer choice and attainment of the
Broadband objectives of the country,” they warned in a statement.
The CEOs stated that the NCC’s declaration of 2017 as the Year of the Telecoms Consumer can be derailed by failure of operators to deliver on the expected quality of service particularly on data throughput and experience due to the weak investment case to support additional capex as a result of deteriorating market conditions.
No comments:
Post a Comment