Business Day (Nigeria)

Elon Musk’s Spacex could transform internet services in Nigeria

- TOCHUKWU OKAFOR

Slow internet service and long buffering periods have driven many Nigerians to ‘wits-end’. In the most remote parts of Nigeria, reliable internet is still hard to come by. About 42 million Nigerians still do not have access to broadband.

The end of that era, however, draws near as the us-based space exploratio­n company founded bye lon musk( sp ac ex) says it is working to pursue all necessary licences needed to bring the Starlink Satellite internet services to Nigeria.

Starlink is still in beta but already has over 10,000 customers. The majority of these Starlink users are in rural or remote areas, such as farmlands or wilderness, with limited access to terrestria­l broadband options as well as a few with no access altogether.

The fledgling service is expected to be a cash cow for Spacex, bringing in as much as $30 billion a year (that is more than 10 times the annual revenue of its existing rocket business).

Spacex plans to launch over 40,000 Starlink satellites over time, but currently, only about 1,300 satellites have been launched.

Starlink is the company’s capital-intensive project, which is intended towards building an interconne­cted internet network with thousands of satellites, known in the space industry as a constellat­ion, designed to deliver high-speed internet to consumers anywhere on the planet.

Addressing Nigeria’s real internet issues

Starlink’s value propositio­n is to provide better internet coverage to rural areas with poor coverage, but there are bigger issues than just coverage that need to be resolved in Nigeria.

It has long been argued that in Nigeria, the internet usage gap is a bigger concern than the internet coverage gap. While projects like Starlink might increase internet coverage, they do not immediatel­y solve the problem of usage.

The biggest factors responsibl­e for the internet usage gap in Nigeria are affordabil­ity of handsets (mobile devices) and data as well as low literacy level. Starlink does not address these issues and they pose a major risk to the success of Starlink in Nigeria.

Financial implicatio­ns for the average Nigerian

Bringing it home, Starlink is, however, currently too expensive for Nigerians and will need regional price adjustment­s to be more widely accessible.

The Starlink hardware costs $499 and the monthly subscripti­on is $99. Unless there is a regional/geographic­al price adjustment, Starlink is too expensive and will not be able to achieve its mission of providing internet to low network remote areas in Nigeria.

Using mt na sap roxy, m tn Nigeria’s annual average revenue per user (ARPU) in 2020 came in at N10,200 ($25). Although data spend is not evenly spread across the client base and a small percentage of the client base accounts for a large percentage of total revenue, according to MTN executives, the data points to how low the data spend is in Nigeria.

Additional­ly, the majority of Nigerians, especially those living in remote areas, cannot afford the internet at $99 per month given that the minimum wage stands at N30,000 per month ($73).

It is also important to note that those that will be able to afford it are highly concentrat­ed in urban areas. In Nigeria, the rural poverty rate is 52.10 percent while the urban poverty rate is at 18 percent.

For star link to be more widely accessible, it needs to make price adjustment­s for Nigeria as well as most African countries as a whole and/or change its strategy to focus on urban households and businesses.

5G rollout - potential involvemen­t for Starlink

One of the unique selling points of Starlink is the internet speed, which is more than 20 times faster than the regular 4G network (300 megabytes per second (Mbps) vs. 12Mbps).

For effective comparison, the 5G network comes close to it in terms of speed. Based on the current trajectory, it seems like Starlink will be commercial­ly available in Nigeria earlier than 5G.

So far, 5G is only commercial­ly available in South Africa and mass commercial rollout will not begin in Nigeria until Q4 (Fourth Quarter) of 2022, while it is still at the testing stage in Kenya.

It is clear that Starlink cannot compete with internet service providers in Nigeria on the basis of affordabil­ity just yet. However, the rollout of panAfrican 5G might make it part of the service infrastruc­ture. 5G connectivi­ty uses a small cell network and comes with concerns over network congestion.

The remedy is a backhaul; an infrastruc­ture that connects cell sites to main data centres. This is where Starlink satellites come in as they are able to serve as a wireless backhaul for the 5G small cells.

Implicatio­ns for internet service providers

Overall, we do not see Starlink as a potential threat to incumbent internet service providers in the short-tomedium term.

However, a number of factors will determine who wins the game in the long run. Specifical­ly, the extent to which purchasing power improves in Nigeria if the cost of Starlink and/or incumbents reduces due to technologi­cal advances, as well as regulatory support (or obstacles).

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