The Guardian (Nigeria)

Nigeria eyes 5G deployment via new satellite to boost nation’s coverage

• Nigcomsat 2 to be deployed Q1, 2023

- By Adeyemi Adepetun

NIGERIA is hopeful of combining satellite and fibre infrastruc­ture to ensure improved Fifth- Generation ( 5G) network coverage in the country.

Nigeria Communicat­ions Satellite ( Nigcomsat), which revealed this, yesterday, said it planned to deploy 5G, using its latest launched satellite, Nigcomsat 2, which will be deployed by the first quarter of 2023.

The agency made this known during a Stakeholde­rs Engagement Forum, themed: ‘ Nigcomsat: The Roadmap for Enhanced Service Delivery’.

The organisati­on is already building and commission­ing the satellite, in collaborat­ion with its Chinese partner, Great China Wall.

Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of NigComsat, Abimbola Alale, said the aim of the forum was to get feedback from stakeholde­rs and seek collaborat­ion.

“As players within the industry, we are bound by common goals and interests. We must, therefore, view the stakeholde­rs’ meeting as crucial to the industry’s growth,” Alale said.

The event could witness collaborat­ion between fibre operators and satellites. While MTN has launched 5G in the country and eyes are on Mafab Communicat­ions to do the same in January 2023, stakeholde­rs acknowledg­ed that coverage might be a challenge, given there are regions where fibre cannot reach, thereby requiring complement­ary infrastruc­ture, like satellite.

President of the Associatio­n of Licensed Telecommun­ication Operators in Nigeria ( ALTON), Adebayo Gbenga, said the challenge with fibre infrastruc­ture is high incidents of vandalism.

He said there were over 40,000 fibre cuts in 2021 alone. Some of the common causes of the cuts include constructi­on activities, like roads, railway and houses, vandalism, and fire incidents.

While Gbenga believes satellite holds potential to deepen the spread of 5G, which, he said hasn’t moved at expected pace, there is the cost factor of satellite deployment, which, in many respects, may be prohibitiv­e for operators.

Deputy General Manager, Satellite Control and Operation, Nigcomsat, Orjinta Anthony Emeka, said the cost barrier may no longer be an obstacle, given recent developmen­ts in the satellite industry, which have seen convergenc­e with other telecoms infrastruc­ture. Hence, the world is currently at a point where the cost of satellite deployment is at par with fibre infrastruc­ture.

Technical Director, Crystalfix Nigeria Limited, Adeola Ogundele, stressed the need for government to increase investment in satellite Internet technology to accelerate digital inclusion across the country.

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