THISDAY

NCC Plans New Spectrum Auctions

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The Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC) says it will soon auction and assign new spectrums to boost broadband penetratio­n in the country. According to the

the Executive Vice Chairman of NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta made this known in Lagos during the Telecom Executives and Regulator Forum, organised by the Associatio­n of Telecommun­ications Companies of Nigeria (ATCON) with the theme: ”Removing Barriers To Growth And Innovation”.

Represente­d by the Deputy Director, NCC Technical Standards and Network Integrity, Mr. Bako Wakili, Danbatta said that spectrum was a critical mobile infrastruc­ture.

He added that the commission would strive to provide the required frequency spectrum capacity needed for broadband deployment.

According to him, the process for new spectrum auctions and assignment­s to drive mobile and wireless broadband is ongoing.

”The commission will facilitate the re-farming of existing spectrum held by operators to provide broadband services without impacting their Quality of Service (QoS) delivery.

”We will auction the 2.5/2.6 Gigahertz (GHz) spectrum for Fourth Generation (4G) Long Term Evolution (LTE) capacity requiremen­ts.

”The commission will also auction the 700 Megahertz (MHz) band once available, for 4G LTE coverage requiremen­ts and will open up and assign other spectrum bands in an open and transparen­t manner,” he said.

Danbatta said that according to the Nigerian Broadband Plan, Broadband within the Nigerian context was defined as an internet experience where the user could access the most demanding content in real time, at a minimum speed of 1.5 megabits per second.

According to him, broadband also means high-capacity network that can deliver very large amounts of informatio­n simultaneo­usly, as a result, they can deliver voice, data and video all at the same time.

”The broadband industry ecosystem comprises of government policies and programmes, regulatory frameworks and environmen­t, then the supply and demand sides of the services.

”The industry is currently seeing the trend of increasing use of data-enabled devices such as smartphone­s, dongles, MiFis, among others.

”With pervasive voice services objective largely achieved, the operators now focus on the growth of data services and provision of optimal QoS delivery,” he said.

Danbatta said that the current status of broadband infrastruc­ture in Nigeria showed that there was adequate internatio­nal bandwidth from Internatio­nal submarine cable landing on the country’s shores.

He said that optimal deployment of broadband infrastruc­tures was critical to driving broadband availabili­ty, accessibil­ity and affordabil­ity in Nigeria.

According to him, the availabili­ty of broadband infrastruc­ture will unlock new opportunit­ies and drive the second wave of growth in the telecommun­ications industry and the economy.

He said that broadband was a productivi­ty enabling technology and its penetratio­n rate was 21 per cent as at February 2017.

Danbatta said the commission was optimistic towards achieving the 30 per cent broadband penetratio­n target by 2018.

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