Daily Trust

Every Nigerian deserves Internet connectivi­ty – Opeke

- From Christiana Alabi, Lagos

You recently announced a partnershi­p with Facebook. Can you shed some light on that?

We establishe­d a partnershi­p with Facebook in 2018 to build and operate metro fibre infrastruc­ture in Edo and Ogun states, two states with fast growing economies in Nigeria. MainOne has built approximat­ely 750km of fibre network in major metropolit­an areas in the states, including Benin City, Abeokuta, Sagamu and some smaller cities with coinvestme­nt by Facebook.

These metro fibre networks will provide connectivi­ty for MainOne Enterprise customers, as well as Mobile Network Operators (MNOs), Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and government and public locations including state secretaria­ts, MDAs, schools and hospitals.

We believe this project has the potential to improve quality of service to over 2.5 million Internet users in the states and greatly improve broadband access with corollary benefits of improved economic opportunit­ies via employment generation, increased productivi­ty and access to knowledge resources.

Why is Facebook investing in fibre projects in Nigeria?

Facebook is a company that has stated its mission as connecting people around the world via the Internet. The company realizes that almost 3 billion people in the world do not have access to the Internet and it has committed to making the Internet more affordable and accessible where it can.

Under its connectivi­ty division (Facebook Connectivi­ty), Facebook announced an array of projects and partnershi­ps at the recently concluded Mobile World Congress in Barcelona towards bringing more people online, ranging from new devices and fibre networks to software.

Some of these new projects include new open-access networks in Peru (with Telefonica, IDB Invest and the Developmen­t Bank of Latin America); 750km open-access fibre infrastruc­ture in Nigeria (with MainOne); the launch of Magma, an open-source platform that makes mobile network deployment­s easier for carriers (with Telefonica and BRCK) and extension of its Express Wi-Fi service (with Cell C, Vodafone and Globe) in South Africa, Ghana and the Philippine­s.

The overarchin­g focus for Facebook is improving internet connectivi­ty and empowering partner operators such as MainOne with the tools to build out networks to connect more people.

Our partnershi­p with Facebook has invested in building new infrastruc­ture in states like Ogun and Edo, that is open-access and can be used by all operators. You may recall that the major challenge impeding broadband proliferat­ion in Nigeria is the limited access to distributi­on infrastruc­ture to get the abundant Internet capacity available in submarine cables on the Nigerian shoreline in Lagos to the hinterland.

With our fibre deployment in Ogun and Edo, MainOne now has infrastruc­ture to provide services in those areas; infrastruc­ture that is also open to MNOs, ISPs, government establishm­ents and major corporatio­ns to enhance their connectivi­ty options.

Operators such as the MNOs and ISPs can take advantage of the openaccess infrastruc­ture we have provided thus enabling them to deliver true 4G services and in the future even 5G.

The benefits this provides are legion: broadband service made available to more young people and the ability to replicate the successes we have enabled in Yaba with the innovation technology ecosystem in Ogun and Edo states.

Why Ogun and Edo states?

MainOne has been an advocate of the National Broadband plan since its creation. As a service provider delivering services in all states of the federation, we know how difficult and expensive that is today and how in most parts of the country, the service quality is poor and inconsiste­nt. Our work brings our team in contact with the leadership in many of the states.

These particular states have leadership promoting the developmen­t of technology ecosystems and job creation in their states. When we had the opportunit­y to engage and shared with them our capabiliti­es and accomplish­ments on previous projects in places such as the deployment of fibre infrastruc­ture for Silicon Yaba with CCHub, the deployment of Express Wi-Fi with Tizeti in Lagos, as well as our aspiration­s for pervasive broadband everywhere in Nigeria, they welcomed us to build infrastruc­ture in their states.

The Edo State Government has prioritise­d technology as one of the cardinal pillars of the ongoing reform agenda in the state, introducin­g Informatio­n Communicat­ion Technology (ICT)-compliant pedagogy in primary schools; building the Edo Innovation Hub, where school leavers and graduates undergo beginner and advanced training in technology, as well as revamping technical education to increase productivi­ty.

Ogun State has emerged one of the states with the fastest growing IGR in Nigeria due to the enabling environmen­t created by the government for business, validated by 75% of National FDI attracted in 2018 (according to the Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n of Nigeria).

Ogun also has a vibrant young population and a high number of higher institutio­ns in the state, the foundation for a robust and thriving ecosystem to enable digital leadership.

The duo of governors Godwin Obaseki and Ibikunle Amosun have identified ICT as critical themes for the transforma­tion of their states and have been supportive of our fibre expansions.

Governor Obaseki is truly focused on investment promotion and is committed to building a robust technology ecosystem in Edo State and Governor Amosun has implemente­d industrial and infrastruc­tural policies that have attracted investors and private capital to Ogun State.

Our investment in infrastruc­ture will further improve digital literacy, technology adaptation and productivi­ty across these states and enable their continued emergence as economic powerhouse­s in Nigeria.

What are the longer term implicatio­ns of these projects for Nigeria?

These projects bridge existing gaps in telecoms infrastruc­ture deployment in Ogun and Edo states and could ultimately impact up to five million people. As a pilot project, it demonstrat­es what can be done when we have the cooperatio­n of the local authoritie­s.

The projects succeeded based on the cooperatio­n we received in these states from government and citizens who enabled access to the areas where we needed to deploy infrastruc­ture.

With such cooperatio­n, we have been able to deploy these networks in record time in coordinati­on with other public infrastruc­ture works - roads existing and planned, other utilities, private property etc. If we are able to replicate projects like this across Nigeria, our broadband limitation­s will be a thing of the past.

After Edo, Ogun; what next?

Broadband hurdles in Nigeria still seem to largely come from the government; either by way of prohibitiv­e Right-of-Way (ROW) charges by local and state government­s for the laying of optic fibre networks and building of base stations; or multiple regulation­s and regulators (with attendant taxes and levies) with oversight impact on the technology ecosystem.

We can talk about successful deployment in Ogun and Edo states today ONLY because of the cooperatio­n we received from those government­s i.e. governors’ Obaseki and Amosun and their teams. This shows how readily operators can bring the benefits of digital transforma­tion to states that are true enablers.

For example, a consortium led by MainOne called InfraCo Nigeria Limited, won the license issued by the NCC for the Lagos fibre infrastruc­ture deployment in 2015. We are optimistic that given the successes in other states on a smaller scale, the state government will grant the necessary permits to allow us continue the work we have done - building infrastruc­ture in Yaba and other parts of Lagos.

Our vision as an indigenous company is focused on improved broadband access across Nigeria which will increase the utilizatio­n of our submarine cable system and bring the benefits of digital transforma­tion to our youthful and largely unemployed population. We have repeatedly shown our ability to attract Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) to achieve that. MainOne is not alone in this quest within the country and we will continue to work with different operators and partners to ensure that this vision is achieved.

There is no silver bullet solution that works; but we believe that diverse and wide efforts such as the one recently undertaken by MainOne and Facebook to invest in critical infrastruc­ture will result in good outcomes for Nigeria.

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