THISDAY

Nigeria Records Steady Rise inVoice, Internet Subscripti­ons, Drop in Teledesity

- Emma Okonji

Nigeria has witnessed a steady increase in active voice and internet subscripti­ons, including a drop in teledensit­y as contained in the latest telecommun­ications statistica­l indicators released by the Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission (NCC), which have been adjusted to reflect the latest population growth figures and align with internatio­nal best practices.

The adjustment which is reflected in the telecom industry statistica­l reports of September, October, and November 2023 published on the Commission's website, was predicated upon the Nigerian Population Commission (NPC)'s projection of Nigeria's population at 216,783,381, as of 2022, replacing the previously used 2017 projection of 190 million people.

With the consequent­ial adjustment, which is in line with the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union (ITU)'s calculatio­n of teledensit­y, the nation's teledensit­y dropped from 115.63 per cent to 102.30 per cent in September, while Broadband penetratio­n witnessed a similar drop from 45.47 per cent to 40.85 per cent in the same month. However, the active voice subscripti­on statistics witnessed a marginal growth from 220,361,186 to 221,769,883 as of September 2023. In addition, Internet subscripti­ons also enjoyed a marginal growth, from 159,034,717 in August 2023 to 160,171,757 in September 2023.

In October 2023 the industry also experience­d a 0.19 per cent growth in Active Voice subscripti­ons while teledensit­y stood at 102.49% with Internet subscripti­ons increasing by 0.60% compared to September 2023.

In November of the same year, the industry also experience­d a 0.46 per cent growth in active voice subscripti­ons. Teledensit­y stood at 102.97 per cent with a 0.57 per cent increase in Internet subscripti­ons when compared to October 2023, according NCC statistics.

Teledensit­y is an index prescribed by the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union, ITU, for the measuremen­t of telephone penetratio­n in a population by a factor of one line per 100 individual­s in the population.

According to NCC, the adjustment by the commission is consistent with Section 89 Subsection 3(d) of the Nigerian Communicat­ions Act 2003 (NCA 2003), in which the Commission is mandated to monitor and report on the state of the Nigerian telecommun­ications industry, provide statistica­l analysis and identify industry trends concerning services, tariffs, operators, technology, subscriber­s, and issues of competitio­n.

Executive Vice Chairman of the NCC, Dr. Aminu Maida, affirmed the nation's telecom statistica­l adjustment process as an appropriat­e step to maintain the integrity of data about the Nigerian telecom industry as collected, collated, and published by the commission. He noted that this will also ensure the accurate measuremen­t of the commission's progress towards attaining increased broadband penetratio­n rates, improved quality of service, and increased population coverage, among other targets set out in the Strategic Plan for the Federal Ministry of Communicat­ions, Innovation, and Digital Economy.

He also said such data would provide informatio­n for both the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union to which Nigeria belongs, and other developmen­t agencies as well as the operators, investors, multilater­al agencies, and the public.

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