The Guardian (Nigeria)

Worries over concentrat­ion of ICT infrastruc­ture in Lagos

- Chike Onwuegbuch­i

IT is an unquestion­able fact that most informatio­n and communicat­ions technology infrastruc­ture are located in Lagos which also happens to be headquarte­rs for most operators in that space.

The position of Lagos as the nation’s commercial nerve centre may have led to this scenario as most businesses and multinatio­nal companies have their operationa­l headquarte­rs in the town.

To this end, accounts for why most ICT infrastruc­ture are located in Lagos at a cost to quality of service and provision of some services only in Lagos and Abuja where such infrastruc­ture is located.

Nigeria Communicat­ionsweek investigat­ions revealed that, there is no commercial data cent r e infrastruc­ture in any other town outside of Lagos as well as inter- connect circuits’ infrastruc­ture.

The implicatio­n of this for voice service according to Ike Nnamani, chief executive officer, Medallion Communicat­ions, a telecommun­ications voice clearing house operator is that across network calls which pass through interconne­ct infrastruc­ture are meant to travel a long distance before its terminatio­n point even when the terminatio­n point is few miles away from the originatin­g point.

“The situation now is that if a subscriber in Enugu wants to call another person in the same environ on another network, that call will have to travel to Lagos where the interconne­ct circuit is located before coming back to Enugu again, in this process the quality of such call will be affected by issues on the switches and microwave links along this process. But, if the interconne­ct circuit is located in Kaduna or closer to Kaduna, there is no need for such travel there by reducing interferen­ce and improve call quality and cost for the operator which are in turn passed to the subscriber­s,” he said.

On the data centre space, Mohammed Rudman, managing director, Internet Exchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN), decries frustratio­ns faced by universiti­es outside of Lagos that have digital content to host at data centres which are only available in Lagos.

“Absence of commercial data centres close to some universiti­es and organizati­ons outside of Lagos that have digital content have forced them to host such content outside of the country because of high cost of connectivi­ty to data centres in Lagos.

“The implicatio­n of this scenario is that since it is far cheaper for them to get connected to the inter- net than data centres in Nigeria they prefer to host their servers out of the country which requires only connectivi­ty to the internet, thereby endangerin­g the survival of data centres as well as federal government efforts to encourage local hosting aimed at keeping local internet traffic local,” he said.

Engr. Gbenga Adebayo, chairman, Associatio­n Licensed Telecommun­ications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON) said that decentrali­zation of interconne­ct circuits are necessary where calls are linked through microwave or satellite technology.

“Presently, most long distance calls are routed through fibre optic backbone links which travels at the speed of light and does not have quality of service issues or high cost in transmissi­on, except where there is a problem on the fibre link that calls are links via microwave.

 ??  ?? L-R: Charles Anudu, Managing Director, Swift Networks; Victoria Onwubiko, Chief Marketing Officer, Swift Networks; Tosin Adefeko, Managing Partner, AT3 Resources; and Chuma Okoye, Chief Operating Officer, Swift Networks, at the press conference...
L-R: Charles Anudu, Managing Director, Swift Networks; Victoria Onwubiko, Chief Marketing Officer, Swift Networks; Tosin Adefeko, Managing Partner, AT3 Resources; and Chuma Okoye, Chief Operating Officer, Swift Networks, at the press conference...

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