The Guardian (Nigeria)

Mergers, acquisitio­n loom in ISPS space

- Chike Onwuegbuch­i

THERE is strong indication that surviving Internet Service Providers (ISPS) are considerin­g consolidat­ion by way of mergers and acquisitio­n as a fallout of the growing harsh operating environmen­t in the country, Nigeria Communicat­ionsweek has learnt.

Satis Kumar, chief operating officer, Direct On Data, said that traditiona­l ISPS are presently facing unfavourab­le operating environmen­t which has made the business unprofitab­le.

He identified the key challenges that include Network Operating Centres (NOC) expansion and power issues, bandwidth cost and base transceive­r stations (Bts)issues – where tower operators they rent towers from charge them as much as N400,000 per month without efficient management of the towers.

“We have had a situation where security men attached to a tower refused to power generator because he was owed salary and our service went down. Bandwidth cost is still a challenge as some wholesale bandwidth companies that bought bulk from undersea cable operators are selling for $15,000 per Mbps if you buy direct from undersea operators you get $8,000. What we are doing now is ‘hand to mouth’ system.

The business runs to pay salaries and cost of operation nothing like profit, I see consolidat­ion in this space through mergers and acquisitio­n into big ISPS to be able to weather the storm of this harsh operating condition. There are some 100 licensed ISPS, today less than 20 percent are operating just to say that something is wrong and needs interventi­on,” he said.

Ajay Awasthi, chief executive officer, Spectranet, lamented poor service delivery by tower operators which is seriously affecting their business and urged Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission

(NCC) to intervene through guide- line to tower operators on the level of service delivery which if not met will attract sanction or none payment by the customer.

“Presently, the costs of delivering services aren’t coming down. This situation is not sustainabl­e. We would like to roll out services across cities in Nigeria, but the situation at the moment does not give you the support to embark on such investment­s. The costs of building infrastruc­ture are growing by 10%; that is huge costs to us. Also, some ISPS are facing the heat. They have contracted tower companies that charge for fees in dollars. I think it is very difficult this time to decide whether to go ahead and expand or stay put,” he noted.

Reacting on the need for policies to encourage ISPS, Engr. Olusola Teniola, president, Associatio­n of Telecommun­ications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON), said that ISP business is still viable if their approach is to address the niche areas of the market that are not threatenin­g to the Mobile Network Operators (MNOS).

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