Ntel, the newest entrant into the telecommunications space, has unveiled
plans for the first phase rollout of its commercial services to the
public.
Its Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Kamar Abass, while
announcing the rollout plan in Lagos yesterday, said ntel would begin
the first phase rollout with the commercial sales of its 0804 mobile
line on April 8 in Lagos and Abuja.
He said although the company
acquired some base transceiver stations (BTS) from the old NITEL, it
also entered partnership agreement with IHS and Helios Towers, builders
of BTS and other telecoms infrastructure, to roll out 600 base stations
for the commercial rollout in Lagos and Abuja, with plans to extend the
rollout plan to Port Harcourt with additional 200 BTS, also known as
base stations.
According to Abass, the Nigerian Communications
Commission (NCC), the telecommunications industry regulator, has
approved all licence authorisations necessary for ntel to launch its
Voice over LTE (VoLTE) network using next generation telecommunications
infrastructure for its first phase rollout in April.
He said ntel had
deployed 200 kilometres of metro fibre optic transmission cables in
Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt, for seamless network connectivity during
the rollout.
The CEO of ntel also added that ntel had deployed LTE Advanced, the latest 4G technology with multi-antennae sites.
“We
are rolling out physical sites in three cities on our 900MHz and
1800MHz bands to launch Voice over LTE come April 8, 2016. We have
signed agreements with trade partners and fulfilled all licence
authorisations and payments and we are up-to-date and there are no
impediments to our launch,” he said.
Abass said Natcoms
Investments Limited, the parent company of ntel has projected over $1
billion investments over the next four years, for its rollout plan,
which he said, would be in phases.
To ensure smooth take off of
its mobile network rollout plan, ntel has completed the construction of
Tier III Datacentre as well as reactivation of SAT-3 submarine
international fibre optic cable.
Natcoms had last year paid
$252.52 million to acquire the assets of the defunct first national
operator (NITEL), to begin commercial operation on its mobile network.
Noting that despite the growth of the telecoms sector in Nigeria which
has seen voice subscriptions rise from less than 60,000 in 2001 to over
147 million as at 2015, he expressed fears that broadband usage has only
grown by 20 per cent. He said NATCOM has come to fill the gap bringing
Nigerians unfettered access to full mobile broadband both on voice and
data services.
“Over the next four and half years, the total
number of mobile broadband customers alone will be greater than all of
the customers that have come into the market on mobile since its
inception. In other words, we are at a point where a major
transformation is in the making. You will see 168 million mobile
broadband customers coming into existence between now and the end of
2019, which is more than all the mobile customers in both narrow and
broadband that we have seen in the last 15 years.”
“That sounds
like an enormous transformation. When it comes to the supply of
broadband services, we are unique because we have more spectrum which
can deliver more output than any network available today and potentially
any network in the future. The spectrum we have has unique features
which can not be compared with any other spectrum band,” Abass said.
Saturday, 2 April 2016
05:13
MR: EDITOR
Orji K. Okorie
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