A recent analysis has revealed that telecom operators lost a significant amount of money in 2023 as a result of spending N27 billion to repair broken cables.
Documents obtained by Bloomberg revealed that the majority of the expenditures were borne by MTN Nigeria, the largest cellular provider in the most populous country in Africa, and Airtel Africa Plc.
For instance, the document revealed that MTN suffered more than 6,000 cuts on its fiber cable last year. On Feb. 28, a cut in its network in three different locations by a road construction firm, an oil serving company, and someone burning rubbish in a manhole meant customers faced more than five hours of data and voice outages.
The operator relocated 2,500 kilometres (1,553 miles) of vulnerable fibre cables between 2022 and 2023, at a cost of more than N11 billion —enough to build 870 kilometres of new fibre lines in areas without coverage.
Data from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) also revealed that the telecom industry spent N14 billion to repair around 59,000 fibre cuts between 2022 and 2023. In 2022, the NCC pegged the number of fibre cuts to 40 daily.
The NCC estimated that over 50,000 cases of significant damage to telecoms infrastructure, including fibre cuts, have been reported in the past five years, ending 2023.
The foundation of today’s communication infrastructure is made up of broadband fiber optic cables, which allow for the high-speed data transfer necessary for a variety of societal, commercial, and personal endeavours, the chairman of the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), Engr. Gbenga Adebayo, told news, adding that telecommunications serves as an ‘enabler’ for all other critical infrastructure and infrastructure sectors vital to national productivity and security.
To function optimally, ALTON chairman said telecommunications infrastructure relies on a complex and interconnected support ecosystem consisting of fibre, satellites, towers, base stations, switches, data centres, etc., which need to function uninterrupted for delivery of optimal Quality of Service (QoS).
He regretted that there have been incidences of adverse cross-sectoral impact on QoS arising from damage to such infrastructure due to excavation during civil works such as road construction, deliberate/negligent vandalization and sabotage as well as theft of cable, equipment, and supplies such as diesel, generators and batteries, undue delay in issuance of site approvals for new towers/base stations as well as harassment of staff /site access denial by state/local agencies to enforce levy payments.
ALTON chairman however called for collaborative partnership with key stakeholders to secure executive and legislative action on the declaration of telecoms infrastructure as Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) and criminalisation of malicious site sealing, access denials, and willful/negligent destruction of telecommunications infrastructure.