Tag: ERGP

  • Nigeria @ ITU 2017: Bolder steps, stronger network

    Nigeria @ ITU 2017: Bolder steps, stronger network

    Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC)Executive Commissioner (Stakeholder Management) SUNDAY DARE, in this piece, examines the global telecoms circle.

    As the Telecom industry summons the tribe of telecommunications experts, organisations, ICT gurus, regulators, investors and governments to the city of Busan in South Korea, expectations are high for conquering new frontiers.

    The telecoms industry is a very rapidly evolving and dynamic one. New digital services and innovative service delivery models are creating fresh opportunities for all. As technology platforms, markets and media daily converge, disruption is fast becoming the “new” normal. Not only are the new platforms challenging existing business and regulatory models, they are also impacting the attainment of critical national objectives such as Nigeria’s push to attain 30% Broadband penetration by 2018. Because technology platforms overlap national boundaries in their impact, forums for inter-national co-operation take on even more critical importance. The ITU’s Telecom World Conference 2017 holding in Bussan, South Korea therefore provides a much-needed platform for public and private sector players in the global telecoms community to forge consensus on critical issues, share ideas for addressing technical, commercial and developmental issues, as well as measure progress on agreed growth initiatives. Additionally, the regular Nigeria Day and Investment Forums held during the Conference have deepened investor confidence, attracting fresh commitments and consolidating on existing ones in the Nigerian telecoms industry. This year will not be different.

    Looking back to Nigeria’s participation at previous editions of the Conference, one can boldly state that much has been achieved. Beyond providing a platform for networking with industry leaders, Nigeria has used the ITU World Conference to showcase the remarkable successes that our industry has attained since its liberalization. Indeed, Nigeria’s telecoms industry has become a reference point for what can be achieved in a short time through the effective interplay of focused regulation, moderated competition and very strong policy support from government. From providing basic telephony services to a very small segment of the population in 2001, we have extended 2G/3G telecoms infrastructure throughout Nigeria, and we are now boldly tackling the challenge of ensuring pervasive rollout of Broadband infrastructure and services to drive national development in accordance with the National Broadband Plan, the Sustainable Development Goals, the National Economic Recovery and Growth (ERGP) and the NCC’s 8-point agenda.

    To be clear, ITU Telecom World 2017 is holding at a time of great stress for the telecoms industry – globally and locally. Voice, SMS and other traditionally high revenue streams are fast depleting, as disruptive digital platforms mature and gain the trust of increasingly sophisticated consumers. In Nigeria, we also have the recent drop in active subscriber base to contend with. In an ideal world, factors such as migration to digital alternatives by both businesses and consumers, the growing uptake of interconnected devices, the enthusiastic uptake of streaming services and the attendant increase in the use of data/digital platforms should lead to revenue transference and/or displacement effects, meaning that what is lost in voice revenues should be automatically recovered from data and digital income streams. This has not happened, however. Monthly ARPU of some players has fallen by more than 85% since 2002, and industry players are struggling to monetize new platforms as they aggressively resist their forced transition to “dumb pipe” status. Meanwhile, infrastructure deployment and maintenance costs are increasing, and some have argued that this will significantly affect the capacity of the major players to fund innovation and growth.

    Being an incurable optimist, one considers that these ordinarily daunting factors should challenge our minds and intellect on coming up with new ideas and innovations that can deliver more efficient services and revenues. As everyone knows, the Nigerian telecom industry horizon is bright and ripe with great potentials. Our sector has achieved significant milestones in GDP contribution (9.5% in Q2’2017), Investment inflows (estimated at US$68billion), employment and citizens’ empowerment without direct government interventions as with the energy, aviation and manufacturing and other sectors over which the sector towers. We cannot however rest on these laurels. The realization of our sector’s huge potentials will not be achieved by sitting on our hands and clinging to our traditional ways of doing things – either as regulators or operators. It is critical that we leverage on forums like the ITU Telecom World to seek workable, win-win solutions. Nigeria’s participation will therefore be leveraged to pursue understanding in several areas, some of which we highlight below.

    First, innovation. ITU World 2017 promises to bring “smart technologies together with smart ideas and smart people to make the world better, sooner” by maximizing opportunities from the ongoing digital transformation. No doubt, the challenge of innovation is a global one. The great irony is that very often, innovation is only truly successful when it displaces an existing model. To illustrate: GSM services disrupted and supplanted the old analog telecoms systems; conversely, the mobile services sector itself is now being disrupted by so-called “Over-the-Top” (OTT) technologies and services. These next-generation applications like Whatsapp, Viber, Facebook messenger, Instagram and a slew of others have come to stay. Described as offering “free rides” to users according to Brian Williamson, a member of Communications Chambers United Kingdom have been aided by the rise of smart phones and improved mobile data and Wi-Fi.   As noted above, developments such as this challenge not only existing business models, but also regulatory models as well.

    The NCC is very much conscious of its statutory responsibility to support the government in ensuring the sustainability of players who have invested in taking communications services to an overwhelming majority of Nigerians. We are also very conscious of the direct, indirect and multiplier effects of the “OTT disruption” on the industry, as well as the security and other implications of the shift in voice communications to data. But no responsible regulator will prevent consumers from taking the full benefit of smarter, more robust and/or cheaper digital alternatives for enhancing their social and business interactions – especially in an emerging economy keen to accelerate development across all sectors through digital platforms. As we can see, operators in Europe and North America are already taking advantage of the new technologies to explore new revenue initiatives through the so-called telecom 2.0. New value chains and new opportunities are being explored, creating new paradigms.  In essence, the “OTT threat” needs to be re-examined from both a business and developmental perspective.

    Our tentative deduction (which we shall be critically interrogating with colleagues from other jurisdictions at ITU World 2017) is that the winning formula is to view disruptive solutions as opportunities for deeper and mutually reinforcing partnerships. Our view is that the challenge of innovation is to design and deliver new models, which will advance Nigeria’s national interest for faster, more efficient digital access for all. In this regard, the NCC has been aggressively pursuing options such as spectrum trading, active infrastructure sharing, and the creation of a value-added service aggregation model to allow for cost efficiencies, quality improvements and consumer satisfaction. With continued support from the President Muhammadu Buhari-led government, the NCC is well positioned to continue on its path as a model regulator and clear leader in regulatory excellence, determined to keep pace with global developments and trends so as to reap maximum benefits for our stakeholders. Our focus in Bussan will therefore be to champion win-win partnerships. We shall thus be showcasing our carefully developed approaches at ITU 2017 and seeking best practice for improvement.

    Second, the data economy: As the Economist recently noted, “data are to this century what oil was to the last one: a driver of growth and change”. Data is being mined from all available sources, analyzed to create artificial intelligence and new services. That Nigeria has not yet taken its rightful place in the emerging data economy is not debatable. But our economic recovery and growth aspirations demand that we move away from mere consumption, to the creation of content and the localization of data flows. Paradoxically, our current position creates a unique leapfrogging opportunity for us to design and deploy a local template. We shall therefore be working very closely with colleagues from other government agencies like NITDA, and from other jurisdictions on the design of new regulatory approaches in a manner that promotes our national interest but which does not jeopardize our country’s ability to derive maximum benefits from the data economy.

    Third, Broadband infrastructure. The NCC is keenly aware that Nigeria’s ability to meet the 30% Broadband penetration target (and other, bigger milestones which rest on Broadband availability) largely depends on the speed with which we can roll out essential Broadband infrastructure over the next fifteen months. The Commission has therefore designed a bold, dynamic and innovative InfraCo (Infrastructure) licensing framework to address the overdependence on mobile Broadband networks and provide an efficient distribution backbone for taking capacity from the submarine cables lying fallow at the shores of Nigeria into the hinterlands where they are needed. The InfraCos are to provide the infrastructure whilst government will provide output-based subsidies, which are contingent on meeting, roll out milestone. The prospect is exciting for the industry.

    In addition, we are currently reviewing our respective licensing and spectrum frameworks to achieve speedier results. As the Broadband Commission has noted, a 10% growth in Broadband penetration adds as much as 1.38% growth to national GDP. We are therefore keenly looking to examine the approaches taken by other jurisdictions and see how we can improve ours, as well as forge partnerships and leverage investment opportunities with both regional and global players. In this regard, it is gratifying to note that the NCC has received firm assurances of support from the Federal Government as well as a number of State Governments on easing up approval processes and charges as we pursue the national objective for the delivery of pervasive Broadband infrastructure throughout Nigeria.

    In summary, our engagement with telecom experts, organisations and policy makers at ITU World 2017 in Bussan is designed to hone an agenda that we are carefully chiseling out for the Nigerian telecoms industry. It is a unique opportunity not only to showcase our successes as an industry, but also to take new learning for the growth and development of our sector. We shall be interrogating our new regulatory models and approaches, maximising the benefit of existing research and deepen our collaboration with other industry players. Equally we shall be pitching our country as a choice destination for telecoms investment, knowing that attracting such investments is key to our future growth. Above all that it keys into the core economic agenda of the President Buhari-led government.

     

  • ERGP: Nigerian Economic Summit begins October

    ERGP: Nigerian Economic Summit begins October

    The 23rd Nigerian Economic Summit (NES23) will hold from October 10 to 12 at the Transcorp Hilton, Abuja.

    It will focus on how to grow the economy through the Economic Recovery Growth Plan (ERGP) mandate.

    Speaking ahead of the summit, Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma, said the  Federal Government would implement measures toward realising a growth target of seven per cent by 2020.

    Udoma said: “The implementation of the Economic Recovery Growth Plan, ERGP is critical to achieving the ambitious goals of this government to diversify the economy and attain a growth rate of seven per cent by 2020.”

    He said the summit would elicit and adopt a solution-based approach in addressing the issues that will expand opportunities, tackle unemployment and improve productivity.

    “This is in line with the aspirations of the ERGP which aims at restoring and sustaining growth, investing in our people, and building a globally competitive economy. The theme is also significant, given the need to sustain the imperatives of the “Made-in-Nigeria” agenda from NES#22.

    ‘’This is expected to enhance the effective implementation of ERGP and also translate to improvement in living standards of the citizen,” he said.

    The theme of the summit is: “Opportunities, productivity & employment: Actualising the Economic Recovery & Growth Plan”.

    According to Udoma, the summit is also significant, given the need to sustain the imperatives of the “Made-in-Nigeria” agenda from NES#22.

    Last year, NES#22 focused on “Made-in-Nigeria” with the aim of getting stakeholders’ commitment to the structural and fiscal changes required to diversify the Nigerian economy by placing much-needed emphasis on Made-in-Nigeria goods and services.

    “It has become an annual dialogue and indeed the flagship event of the NESG providing a credible and widely recognised platform for top policymakers and corporate leaders,” he said.

  • Bonny Bodo: FG, NLNG, Julius Berger sign N120b tripartite agreement

    Bonny Bodo: FG, NLNG, Julius Berger sign N120b tripartite agreement

    The Federal Government has signed N120 billion tripartite agreement with the Nigeria Liquified Natural Gas (NLNG) Limited and Julius Berger Nigeria Plc to construct Bonny Bodo road in the Niger Delta.

    The contractual agreement will ensure the project is completed and delivered in four years.

    The Federal Government, through the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing made a commitment of N60 million for the project while NLNG will provide the remaining  N60 million to ensure successful completion of the project.

    Speaking at the agreement signing on Wednesday in Abuja, Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola described the meeting as concluding part of the procurement process for the project execution.

    He said the gesture was in compliance with the Economic Recovery Growth Plan (ERGP) of the federal government, commitment to develop the Niger Delta as well as the partnership with the private sector as major contributor to national growth.

    Fashola said: “Essentially we will formally sign the agreement today. It concluded the procurement process for starting the constructing process of the Bonny bridge.

    “This is important for many reasons. First, it complied with the ERGP which the President launched to revive the economy and one of the pillars of that plan is infrastructure provision….therefore NLNG has decided for reasons which you will hear from them to add funds on equal basis to the project to the value of N120.6 billion and they will be taking 50 per cent of the cost of delivering the project while government takes 50 percent of the cost.

    “This is a major statement in partnership with private sector to deliver public use. We gather here to improve the quality of lives in the Niger Delta, spend more in developing infrastructure. We assure that immediately work starts, we will start to see improvements in the various value chains.”

    In his remarks, NLNG Managing Director, Tony Attah, said the project will open the Niger Delta to new frontiers of development and secure better opportunities for the rural communities.

    He said the gesture was part if their efforts to contributing to the development of the region.

    According to him, the NLNG has drastically reduced gas flaring from over 65 per cent before it commenced operation to 20 per cent today.

    Beyond the project, he disclosed plans to make the Bonny mini-Dubai, such that a sum of N3 billion will be committed to the region for genuine development in the next 25 years.

    Attah attributed high poverty rate as major reason for unrest in the region stressing that the community still host major federal government investments

    “This is a 40 kilometres road that connects Bonny kingdom to Port Harcourt and open up the community to the rest of the world. If you live in Port Harcourt and  you want to visit Bonny, you can only do that through boat but now it will open it for greater opportunities,” he said.

    The Managing Director, Julius Berger Nigeria Plc, Wolfgang Goetsch, said the tripartite agreement and the agreement between the construction firm and FMPWH have demonstrated government commitment to the nation’s development.

    He said local enterprises would be engaged to supply raw materials while the project wi also create jobs for the rural communities.

    Goetsch pledged timely delivery of the project in alignment with the contract agreement.

    “The contractual time for delivery of the project is four years if everything go as planned. We are already doing mobilisation and soil assessment, the dry season is approaching which is better for us in this type of project,” he added.

  • Budget minister seeks agency’s support for ERGP

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma has called on the Centre for Management Development (CMD) employees to help government actualise its Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP’s) goals.

    Speaking in Lagos during a facility tour at the CMD’s Lagos office, the ERGP, according to him, needs everybody’s contribution to succeed. He said his ministry was determined to drive the ERGP objectives, urging CMD’s members of staff to familiarise themselves with the objectives.

    According to Udoma, ERGP’s three main objectives are to restore growth, and slowly get the economy out of recession. “We have moved the economy back to production as we are creating millions of jobs through rice farming. We need to develop our capacity for management for us to achieve the ERGP goals and the CMD is key for government to achieve these goals,” he said.

    Udoma urged the CMD to help train Nigerians in the art of management. “The Federal Government will support the CMD to realise its objectives,” he said, adding that the country’s revenues are challenged at present, and that agencies should think outside the box and generate surplus revenues to drive the agency.

    “We need to work together. The real wealth of the people is in its people. The CMD should help to develop the capacity of Nigerians to achieve the ERGP goals,” he said.

    CMD Director-General, Kabir Usman, praised the budget ministry under Udoma for raising the annual budget of the agency from N28 million to N64 million. He urged the minister to facilitate early release of the agency’s budget cash. “The new minister has helped the CMD to get N28 million allocation annually. But we want a timely release of the fund,” he said.

    The Federal Government unfolded its ERGP, which outlined how the country will get out of recession and attain stability and growth. The economic blueprint, itemised the potentials in the economy and how they can be harnessed for economic growth, development and good of all.

    The ERGP recognised that Nigeria has the potential to become a major player in the global economy by virtue of its human and natural resource endowments. However, this potential, it said, has remained relatively untapped over the years.

    Analysts said the content of the ERGP shows that government is already approaching the solution to the nation’s economic challenges with the same will and commitment it has demonstrated in the fight against corruption and economic development.

    They believed that the ERGP had brought together all the sectoral plans for agriculture and food security, energy and transport infrastructure, industrialisation and other means  that can be used to revive the economy.

    Besides, after a shift from agriculture to crude oil and gas in the late 1960s, Nigeria’s growth has continued to be driven by consumption and high oil prices. “Previous economic policies left the country ill-prepared for the recent collapse of crude oil prices and production. The structure of the economy remains highly import dependent, consumption driven and undiversified,” they said.

    The ERGP, a Medium Term Plan for 2017 – 2020, builds on the Strategic Implementation Plan (SIP) and has been developed for the purpose of restoring economic growth while leveraging the ingenuity and resilience of the Nigerian people – the nation’s most priceless assets.

    It is also articulated with the understanding that the role of government in the 21st Century must evolve from that of being an omnibus provider of citizens’ needs into a force for eliminating the bottlenecks that impede innovation and market-based solutions.

     

  • BoI to raise N1trillion for ERGP

    BoI to raise N1trillion for ERGP

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) is planning a fundraiser of N1trillion from within and outside the country to finance industrial component of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP).

    Giving this hint at the weekend was the Acting Managing Director, Bank of Industry, Waheed Olagunju. He spoke in Abuja during the bank’s 57th Annual General Meeting.

    The bank also released strategies aimed at revving up its risk assets to N1.2 trillion by 2019 in line with its revalidated strategic plan (2016-2019).

    Justifying the need for the fundraiser, Olagunju said: “The bank was engaging in an aggressive fund mobilisation drive in order to support federal government’s ERGP as well as support ventures that would fast track Nigeria’s realisation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Under the plan, it is envisaged that enterprises financed by BoI would generate more than five million jobs.”

    The bank had commenced discussion with the Development Bank of Nigeria and some foreign national as well as multilateral development finance

    “Efforts by both the federal government and the Central Bank of Nigeria is to make the bank more viable despite competing needs and financial constraints, the recapitalisation drive by the bank became necessary in achieving its developmental agenda and in ensuring that MSMEs account for at least 30 per cent of the Bank’s projected risk assets of N1.2 trillion by 2019.”

    Olagunju said given a breakdown of the bank’s activities in the year under review, the bank at 30th April, 2017, had already exceeded last year’s disbursement to MSME’s by disbursing more than N13 billion as against last year’s N8billion which represents 62% increase.

    The volume of new loans rose by 10% to N171bn from N156bn in 2015, while disbursements to small and medium enterprises (SMEs) similarly went up by 42% within the same period to N8bn from N5.64bn.