Friday, April 1, 2011

USA Africa Dialogue Series - STAR INFORMATION: Telecommunications Information in Nigeria As at End of January 2011


Dear All:

The upcoming elections might be as much a ballot-box war as an ICT (telephony!) citizens' war....

QUOTE

INEC PROVIDES HOTLINE FOR VIDEO/PHONE COMPLAINTS  

INEC has provided avenues for electorate to link up with the commission if there is any need. Not only that electorates can send complaints via sms but there are options of email and video uploads. 

"Sending reports by SMS: 0816-666-2222; 0812-000-6622; and 0809-666-2221.
"Sending reports by Email: info@reclaimnaija.net

"Sending a tweet with the hashtag/s #reclaimnaija or#NigeriaDecides
"Sending reports via web. This is direct reporting on the www.reclaimnaija.net website. To send direct reports, the monitor logs on to the above website and completes the following steps: 
1. Click on the link "click to submit a report," a report form appears.
2. Enters the title of the report in the "report Title" field; 
3. Enters the incidents being reported in the "Description" field; 
4. Types in the location of the incident and name of the state in the "find location" field, e.g.Uvwie, Delta State ; 
5. Selects a category that describes the incident, e.g. "Names Missing from Register"; 
6. Clicks on the "submit" button.
"Sending video or photo reports. Video and photo reports of incidents can be sent via email to info@reclaimnaija.net"
The hotlines for the poll that can be called by Nigerians are:
0707-0273-6781, 0707-0273-6782, 0707-0273-6783, 0707-0273-6784, 0707-0273-6785
0707-0273-6786, 0707-0273-6787, 0707-0273-6788, 0707-0273-6789.
The commission has a situation room where all of these are monitored. In the same vein, there is a plan for CCTV at the polling stations.  

UNQUOTE


But we shall see.....


 

Table: Telecommunications Information in Nigeria As at End of January 2011

 

Item

Numbers

Operator

Numbers

 

 

 

 

Total OVERALL number of  GSM lines

131,720,867

 

 

Total  OVERALL number of   CDMA mobile lines

 17,187,721

 

 

Total OVERALL number of  fixed and fixed-wireless  lines

9,348,271

 

 

Total OVERALL number of  telecommunication lines

158,256,859  

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total number of  connected telecommunications lines

 114,628,533

 

 

Total number of active lines,  mobile and fixed lines

89,840,343

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total number of connected GSM lines

 96,547,864

 

 

Total  number of connected CDMA mobile lines

 12,338,686

 

 

Total number of connected fixed and fixed-wireless  lines

 2,741,983   

 

 

Other connected lines?

3,000,000

 

 

Total number of connected lines

114,628,533

 

 

 

 

 

 

Total number of active GSM lines active  

 82,618,510 

MTN

38,683,520

Globacom

19,627,415

Airtel

15,834,243

Etisalat

6,791,986

Others?

1,681,346

Total

 82,618,510

The number of active CDMA mobile lines  

  6,186,442

Visafone

2,558,867

Multilinks Telkom

1,454,704

Starcomms

1,149,380

Reltel

939,145

Others?

84,346

Total

 6,186,442

 

 

Total number of active fixed and fixed-wireless lines

 1,035,391   

Starcomms

575,417

Multilinks Telkom

121,834

Reltel

104,367

13 Other Operators?

233,773

Total

 1,035,391

Total number of active lines,  mobile and fixed & fixed-wireless lines

89,840,343

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nigeria now has 83m active GSM lines

Source: Business Day – www.businessdayonline.com

 

http://business.webpagesonlineng.com/nigeria-now-has-83m-active-gsm-lines/?utm_source=INK&utm_medium=copy&utm_campaign=share&

 

Nigeria's GSM subscriber-base continues to rise n a strong and growing telecoms market. Latest figures received from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) indicate 83 million active GSM lines.

Of this figure, MTN has 38,683,520; Globacom 19,627,415; Airtel 15,834,243 and Etisalat 6,791,986. Meanwhile, Globacom has emerged the number two operator by subscriber number in one of the telecoms market upsets emerging out of the 2010 telephone subscriber information, according to the NCC.

The much-awaited annual market information which offers insight into the annual state of play in the telecoms market performance of operators using key indicator of subscriber numbers, and provides a barometer to measure the state of health of the telecoms industry was obtained by Technology Times on the website of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC).

The official government figure showed Glo ending 2010 with 19,627,415 lines as against Airtel Nigeria's 15,834,243, representing a difference of 3,793,172 lines between them. While both operators had been running neck-to-neck over the last few years, Glo's triumph over Airtel firmly places Glo in number two place.

But no rival has been able to upset the clear market leadership of MTN Nigeria that ended 2010 with 38,683,520 lines out of the nation's active phone lines totalling 88,348,026, and recorded a year-end growth rate of 6.37 percent over the preceding quarter during the period. 
MTN Nigeria continues to lead the telecoms market by subscriber number and has a huge 19,056,105 lines separating it from Globacom, the number two player.

During its high profile entry into Nigeria last year, Bharti Airtel - the new owners of Airtel - had promised to upstage MTN Nigeria as the telecoms market leader in the country and also planned to commit a $600 million war chest to upgrade the operator's network, improve service quality and drive an aggressive entry into rural and underserved areas to achieve the Nigerian market conquest.

However, the state of market performance reveals that Airtel may have ignored an equally bullish competitor in Globacom which, last year, announced the take-off of its international undersea cable, Glo 1, which it reckons will offer adequate market edge to support the introduction of new data services that will lock in existing subscribers and win new ones as the telecoms market players look beyond the traditional revenue stream from voice for survival.

Another major market upset was recorded by Etisalat, the market's last entrant that had 6,791,986 lines at year-end but showed up from this seemingly disadvantaged position with an impressive growth rate of 25.37 percent in the last quarter of 2010.

Within the family of five GSM operators who, among them, account for 91.9 percent of Nigeria's 88.3 million (ie: 83million) active phone lines, Etisalat recorded the most bullish growth in the last quarter with 25.37 percent, followed by Globacom with 11.48 percent. On the other hand, MTN Nigeria recorded a growth rate of 5.89 percent while Airtel's growth appreciated by 1.81 per cent within the period.

MTN's slow growth in the last quarter of 2010, recording 5.89 percent over the preceding one, may be interpreted to mean that the market leader may have chosen to secure its existing customers and be less aggressive in attracting new ones.

But the latter position is mitigated by MTN Nigeria's decision last year to aggressively drive a rural telephony strategy that may win it new connections in rural and underserved markets in Nigeria's geographically dispersed terrain when it signed a $400 million deal with Chinese equipment supplier, Huawei Technologies.

Under the pact, MTN, known to be a traditional prospect for the high networth cream of the market, says it is reviewing its strategy alongside Huawei Technologies to cover no fewer than 500 villages by the end of 2011.

The MTN-Huawei deal is generally regarded to be a response to Airtel, known to be adept at creaming off gold from the bottom of the pyramid based on not only its experience from its home country, India, but also on its pedigree.

Airtel is currently the world's fifth largest telecoms operator with over 207.8 million subscribers across 19 countries at the end of 2010. It is also the largest mobile phone company in India, counting over 152.5 million subscribers at the end of 2010.

Another key outcome of the 2010 telecoms market duel among operators is that the Nigerian telecoms industry remains a terrain controlled by the deep pocket GSM players who, at year-end, controlled 91.9 percent market share leaving just 6.91 percent and 1.19 percent to mobile CDMA, and fixed and fixed-wireless operators, respectively.

That is not likely to change soon, as the CDMA market groans from rising competition from GSM operators who are equally poised to step up the game in the new year.

MTN Nigeria, realising the seeming edge offered Glo by its wholly-owned submarine cable Glo 1, has teamed up with in-country competitor, Vodacom of South Africa, one of the key investors in WACS, for access to a competing fibre-optic cable facility due to land in Nigeria by mid-year.

Within the CDMA market, the smaller mobile operators are led by Visafone which accounted for 2,558,867 active lines, followed by Multilinks Telkom, owned by South Africa's Telkom with 1,454,704 lines. Starcomms trailed them with 1,149,380 active lines against Reltel's 939,145 lines during the same period.

Meanwhile, within the sector, Multilinks Telkom, which has indicated its intention to exit the Nigeria CDMA market on account of losses recorded by the company, accounted for the most bullish year end growth of 15.36 percent, followed by Starcomms with 9.82 percent, and Visafone with 1.52 percent.

However in the fixed and fixed-wireless market, Starcomms leads with 575,417 lines, followed by Multilinks Telkom with 121,834 lines and Reltel with 104,367.   
The sector which has 16 operators, accounting for 1,050,237 active lines, recorded a year end growth rate of 9.17 percent.

In a related development, NCC reports that total active phone lines had grown to 89,840,343 by January this year, with the GSM sector accounting for 82,618,510 lines; mobile CDMA - 6,186,442 and fixed and fixed-wireless - 1,035,391.

During the same period, total connected lines in the telecoms market peaked at 114,628,533 with mobile GSM accounting for 96,547,864; mobile CDMA for 12,338,686, and fixed and fixed-wireless 2,741,983.

The nation's overall installed telecoms network capacity as of January this year stood at 158,256,859,with mobile GSM sector providing 131,720,867 lines; mobile CDMA - 17,187,721 lines, and fixed and fixed-wireless - 9,348,271 lines.

_____________________________________________________________________________________________


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