Wednesday, August 13, 2025

Broadband Web in Nigeria: A Work in Progress

Below the shade of a cocoa tree outdoors the hamlet of Atan, close to Ibadan, Nigeria, Bolaji Adeniyi holds court docket in a tie-dyed T-shirt. “In Nigeria we see farms as father’s work,” he says. Adeniyi’s father taught him to farm with a hoe and a machete, which he calls a cutlass. As of late, he says, farming in Nigeria can look fairly totally different, relying on whether or not the farmer has entry to the Web or not.

Not far-off, farmers are utilizing drones to map their plots and calculate their fertilizer inputs. Elsewhere, farmers can swipe via safety digicam footage of their fields on their cellphones. That saves them from having to patrol the farm’s perimeter and probably harmful confrontations with thieves. To have the ability to do these issues, Adeniyi notes, the farmers want broadband entry, at the very least among the time. “Dependable broadband in Atan would appeal to worldwide cocoa sellers and allow entry to agricultural extension brokers, which might assist farmers,” he says.

Adeniyi has a level in sociology and along with rising cocoa timber, works as a criminologist and statistician. When he’s in Ibadan, a metropolis of 4 million that’s southeast of Atan, he makes use of a laptop computer and has ok Web. However at his farm in Atan, he carries a candy-bar cell phone and should trek to 1 of some spots across the settlement if he desires higher odds of getting a sign. “At occasions,” Adeniyi says, “it’s like wind bringing the sign.”

On paper, Nigeria has loads of broadband capability. Eight undersea cables result in 380 terabits of capability to Nigeria’s coast. The primary undersea cable to reach, SAT-3/WASC, made land in 2001; the newest is 2Africa, which landed in 2024. They’re among the many 75 cables that now join coastal Africa to the remainder of the world. Nigeria’s massive telecom operators proceed to construct long-distance, high-capacity fiber-optic networks from the cables to the necessary industrial nodes within the cities. However distribution to the city peripheries and to rural locations equivalent to Atan continues to be incomplete.

Incomplete is an understatement: Lower than half of the nation’s 237 million folks have common entry to broadband, with that entry principally occurring via cell units slightly than extra steady fastened connections. Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovation, and Digital Financial system has set a purpose to virtually double the size of the nation’s fiber-optic spine and for broadband to achieve 70 p.c of the inhabitants by the top of this yr. However the ministry additionally claimed in 2024 that it will join Nigeria’s 774 native governments to the broadband spine; as of February 2025, it had reached solely 51. The broadband buildout has been severely hampered by Nigeria’s unreliable energy grid. Past the mere inconvenience of frequent outages, the poor high quality of electrical energy drives up prices for operators and prospects alike.

Throughout a go to to Nigeria earlier this yr, I talked to dozens of individuals about broadband’s influence on their lives. For greater than 20 years, the nation has possessed an unbelievable portal to the world, and so I had hoped to listen to tales of transformation. In some instances, I did. However that have was removed from uniform, with a lot work left to do.

The place Nigeria’s broadband has arrived

Broadband is enabling every kind of modifications in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation. All eight undersea cables make landfall in Lagos, the cultural, industrial, and one-time federal capital of Nigeria, and one of many cables additionally lands close to Port Harcourt to the southeast. The nation’s fiber-optic backbones—which in early 2025 consisted of about 50,000 to 60,000 kilometers of fiber-optic cable—join the undersea hyperlinks to the cities.

A small map of Africa showing Nigeria in orange, with 4 detailed maps of Nigeria showing the progressive buildout of fiber-optic lines from 2008, 2015, 2020, and 2025. From 2008 to 2025, Nigeria has skilled extraordinary development in each the variety of undersea high-speed cables touchdown on its shores and the buildout of broadband networks, particularly in its cities. Nonetheless, fixed-line broadband is unaffordable for many Nigerians, and about half of the inhabitants has no entry. Africa Bandwidth Maps

“Nearly all over the place in Nigeria is roofed with long-haul cables,” says Abdullateef Aliyu, basic supervisor for initiatives at Phase3 Telecom, which is liable for maybe 10,000 km of these cables. Most Nigerian cities have at the very least one fiber-optic spine, and the largest have greater than half a dozen.

The result’s that essentially the most densely populated areas take pleasure in competing Web service suppliers providing fiber optics or satellite tv for pc to the house. Connecting the opposite half of Nigerians, the agricultural majority, will develop into worthwhile sometime, says Stanley Jegede, government chairman of Phase3 Telecom, nevertheless it had higher be “affected person cash.”

Two photos, one showing a worker on a tall ladder thatu2019s leaning against a power pole, and the other showing a man in Nigerian dress with high-voltage power lines in the background. A Phase3 Telecom employee [left] installs fiber-optic cables on energy poles in Abuja, Nigeria. Abdullateef Aliyu [right], Phase3’s basic supervisor for initiatives, says the nation is utilizing solely round 25 p.c of the capability of its undersea cables.Andrew Esiebo

Unsurprisingly, the shoppers that received broadband first had been these with impatient cash, those who might provide the perfect return to the telecom corporations: the oil firms that dominate Nigerian exports, the banks which have since boomed, the Nollywood studios that compete with Bollywood and Hollywood.

The impatient cash confirmed up first in flash Victoria Island in Lagos. If you wish to serve worldwide prospects or do high-speed inventory buying and selling, you want a dependable hyperlink to the skin world, and in Nigeria which means Victoria Island.

Right here, the fiber-optic cables rise like thick vines in grey rooms on the bottom flooring or within the basements of the workplace towers that home the banks powering Nigerian finance. Between the towers, buying plazas host overseas fast-food franchises and cafés.

From their perch close to the submarine community, the banks realized that cell broadband would enable them to achieve exponentially extra prospects, particularly as soon as these prospects might reap the benefits of Nigeria’s instant-payment system, launched by the central financial institution in 2011. Utilizing cell funds, financial institution apps, and different monetary apps, Nigerians can conduct handy cellphone transactions for something from road meals to airplane tickets. The central financial institution’s platform was so successful that till not too long ago, it dealt with extra money than its U.S. equivalents.

Simply as necessary as comfort is belief. Nigerians belief one another so little {that a} college guesthouse I stayed in had its title printed on the wall-mounted air conditioner items to discourage theft. However Nigerians belief cell funds. Uber drivers suppose nothing of sharing their checking account numbers with passengers, in order that the passengers pays their fares through prompt fee. A Nigerian engineer defined to me that many individuals want that to disclosing their bank-card info on the Uber platform.

Broadband has additionally introduced change to Nollywood, Nigeria’s huge movie business, second solely to India’s Bollywood when it comes to worldwide movie output. On the one hand, broadband reworked Nollywood’s distribution mannequin from simply pirated DVDs to paywalled streaming platforms. Alternatively, streaming platforms made it simpler for Nigerians to entry overseas video content material, reducing into native producers’ market share. The platforms additionally empowered performers and different content material producers to bypass the normal Nollywood gatekeepers. As a substitute, content material creators can publish straight to YouTube, which can pay them in the event that they obtain sufficient views.

Emmanuella Njoku, a pc science main on the College of the Individuals, a web-based faculty, is interested by a graphics or product-design job when she graduates. However a broadband-enabled facet hustle is beginning to appear like a viable various, she informed me in January. She edits Japanese anime recaps and publishes them to her YouTube channel. “I’ve 49,000 followers proper now, however I would like 100,000 followers and 10 million views within the final 90 days to monetize,” Njoku stated.

Photo of a smiling woman in a wheelchair taking a selfie, with an open laptop at her side. Laptop science scholar Emmanuella Njoku has discovered a broadband-enabled facet gig: creating YouTube movies.Andrew Esiebo

A good friend of hers had not too long ago crossed the 100,000-follower threshold with YouTube movies targeted on visits to high-end eating places round Lagos. The good friend anticipated eating places and different firms to start out paying her for visits, along with amassing her tiny minimize of YouTube’s advert income.

Each girls stated they’d want jobs that enable them to telecommute, a extra practical prospect in Nigeria in the previous few years due to the provision of broadband. Extra firms are open to distant work and hybrid work, says telecom analyst Fola Odufuwa. That’s very true in Lagos, the place gas shortages and world-class site visitors jams encourage folks to attenuate the variety of days they commute.

For teachers, broadband could make it simpler to collaborate on analysis. In 2004, IEEE Spectrum reported on a Federal College of Expertise researcher in Owerri carrying handwritten messages to a contact, who had a pc with an Web connection and would sort up the messages and ship them as emails. At this time researchers on the Federal College of Expertise campus in Minna collaborate nearly with colleagues in Europe on an Web of Issues demonstration undertaking. Whereas some occasions happen in individual, the collaborators additionally alternate emails, meet by videoconference, and work on joint publications through the Web.

Why broadband rollout in Nigeria has been so sluggish

The undersea cables and fiber-optic backbones have additionally been a boon for Nigeria’s telecom business, which now accounts for 14 p.c of GDP, third solely to agriculture (23 p.c) and worldwide commerce (15 p.c).

Photo of a crowded city street, with colorful cars and umbrellas, and the word Tecno on several blue buildings. Laptop Village in Lagos is Nigeria’s predominant hub for electronics.Andrew Esiebo

Alcatel (now a part of Nokia) related SAT-3 to Nigeria’s predominant switching station in December 2001, simply a few years into the primary steady democratic authorities since independence in 1960. The state-run phone monopoly, Nigerian Telecommunications (Nitel), was primarily liable for the rollout of SAT-3 inside the nation. Lower than 1 p.c of the 130 million Nigerians had cellphone strains in 2002, so the federal government established a second provider, Globacom, to attempt to speed up competitors within the telecom market.

However a combination of mismanagement and wider difficulties contributed to the sluggish unfold of broadband, as Spectrum reported in 2004. Broadband entry has soared since then, and but Aliyu of Phase3 Telecom estimates that the nation is utilizing solely round 25 p.c of the whole capability of its undersea cables.

Nigeria’s unreliable electrical energy drives up telecom costs, making it tougher for poor Nigerians to afford broadband. The spotty energy grid signifies that normal telecom gear wants backup energy. However battery or diesel-powered cellphone towers appeal to theft, which in flip undermines community reliability. Energy outages happen with such frequency that even when the lights and air con exit throughout in-person conferences, it arouses no remark.

A go to to Nitel’s former headquarters, a 32-story skyscraper with antennas and a lighthouse perched on prime, is revealing. Telecom marketing consultant Jubril Adesina leads the best way into the once-grand entrance, the place armed guards wave guests previous inoperative turnstiles.

Two stacked photos, the top one showing the front of some equipment and bottom showing a man in a suit looking at telecommunications equipment on racks. NTEL’s chief info officer, Anthony Adegbola, inspects broadband gear on the firm’s knowledge middle in Lagos, which nonetheless homes out of date coaxial cable bins [top]. Andrew Esiebo

Our vacation spot is NTEL, a non-public agency that inherited a lot of Nitel’s mantle, on the seventeenth ground. Adesina is explaining how a current cell tariff enhance will enhance cell penetration, however after we attain the elevator foyer, he stops speaking. The facility is out once more. His eyes flip to the unlit indicator alongside the shut elevators, then he appears to be like on the stairs and whispers, “We are able to’t.”

As a substitute, Adesina walks round to the again of the constructing and greets NTEL chief info officer Anthony Adegbola, who together with a small crew of engineers and technicians guards one other relic of Nigeria’s telecom previous. We stroll alongside a hallway previous rooms with empty desks and previous desktop computer systems and down a brief staircase. Cables snake alongside the ceiling and above a door. Past the door, the boys level proudly to SAT-3, Nigeria’s first high-speed undersea cable, rising alongside {an electrical} grounding cable from the tiled ground. Server racks home out of date coaxial cable bins, displayed as if in a museum, subsequent to immediately’s fiber-optic bins. For the reason that final time Spectrum visited, engineers have expanded SAT-3’s capability from 120 gigabits per second to 1.4 terabits per second, Adegbola says, due to enhancements in knowledge transmission through totally different wavelengths, and higher receiving bins within the room. NTEL backs up the grid electrical energy with a battery financial institution and two mills.

In Nigeria, cell broadband is widespread

What is commonly lacking in Nigeria is the native connection, the previous few kilometers resulting in prospects. Within the developed world, that connection works like this: Web service suppliers (ISPs) plug into the closest spine through one in all a number of applied sciences and ship a small slice of bandwidth to their enterprise and residential prospects. A switching station referred to as a level of presence (PoP) serves as an on- and off-ramp between the spine and the ISPs. The ISPs are liable for putting in the fiber-optic cables that result in their prospects; they might additionally use microwave antennas to beam a sign to prospects.

However in Nigeria, fiber-optic ISPs have been sluggish to seize market share. Of the nation’s 300,000 or so fixed-line broadband subscribers—simply 0.001 p.c of Nigerians—a couple of third are served by the main ISP, Spectranet. By comparability, the typical fastened broadband penetration fee amongst nations within the Organisation for Financial Co-operation and Improvement (OECD) was 42.5 p.c in 2023, led by South Korea, with 89.6 p.c penetration.

Starlink’s satellite-based service, launched in Nigeria in 2023, is now the second greatest broadband ISP, with about 60,000 subscribers. That’s virtually triple the third greatest ISP, FiberOne. Satellite tv for pc is outcompeting fiber as a result of it’s extra dependable and has increased speeds and tolerable latency, though it prices extra. A Starlink satellite tv for pc terminal can serve as much as 200 subscribers and retails for about US $200 plus a $37 month-to-month price. A comparable fiber-to-the-home plan in Abuja, the place the median month-to-month take-home pay is $280, prices about $19 a month.

Photo of a row of color display cases holding cellphones, with signs offering phone and laptop repair. In Lagos’s Laptop Village, you should purchase or promote a cell phone or pc, or get yours repaired.Andrew Esiebo

In the meantime, Nigeria has 142 million mobile subscriptions, and so most Web customers entry the Web wirelessly, through a cell community. In different phrases, Nigeria’s cell market is almost 500 occasions as massive as the marketplace for fastened broadband. The cell networks additionally depend on the fiber-optic backbones, however as a substitute of utilizing PoP gateways, they hyperlink to mobile base stations, every of which may attain as much as hundreds of cell units however could not provide best high quality of service.

Cell Web is an effective factor for individuals who can afford it, which is most Nigerians, in keeping with the Worldwide Telecommunication Union. The price of fixed-line broadband continues to be round 5 occasions as a lot, which explains why its market share is so tiny. However cell Web isn’t sufficient to run many companies, nor do cell community operators assure community speeds or low latency, that are essential elements for high-frequency buying and selling, telemedicine, and e-commerce, and for white-collar jobs requiring streaming video calls.

Nigeria is 129th on the planet in Web speeds

Web speeds throughout Nigeria fluctuate, however broadband tester Ookla’s spring 2025 median for fastened broadband was 28 megabits per second for downloads and 15 Mb/s for uploads, with latency of 25 milliseconds. That places Nigeria 129th on the planet for fastened broadband. In Might, Starlink delivered obtain speeds between 44 and 50 Mb/s, uploads of round 12 Mb/s, and latency of round 61 ms. The highest nation, Singapore, averaged 393 Mb/s down and 286 Mb/s up, with 4 ms latency. And people numbers for Nigeria don’t seize the impact of unpredictable electrical energy cuts.

Steve A. Adeshina, a pc engineering professor and machine-vision professional at Nile College, within the capital metropolis of Abuja, says he routinely runs up in opposition to the bounds of Nigeria’s broadband community. That’s why he retains two private mobile modems on his desk. His college contracts with a number of Web suppliers, however the broadband in his lab continues to be intermittent. For machine-vision analysis, with its enormous datasets, failing to add knowledge saved on his native machine to the extra highly effective cloud processor the place he runs his experiments means failing to work. “Now we have optical fiber, however we’re not getting worth for cash,” Adeshina says. If he wakes as much as a failed in a single day knowledge add, he has to start out it once more.

Photo of tangled black cables spilling from a rectangular opening in the sidewalk, with street traffic and a distinctive tall building in the background. Fiber-optic cable spills from an open manhole in Lagos. Native gangs could minimize the cables or steal elements. Andrew Esiebo

There are numerous causes for the sluggish Web, however chief amongst them are frequent cable cuts—50,000 in 2024, in keeping with the federal authorities. The issue is so unhealthy that in February, the federal government established a committee to forestall community blackouts as a result of cable cuts throughout highway development, which it blamed for 60 p.c of the incidents.

“The problem is reaching the hinterland,” Aliyu of Phase3 Telecom says, and retaining strains intact as soon as there. To make his level, Aliyu, wearing a quick three-piece go well with and purple tie, drives an organization pickup truck from Phase3’s well-appointed places of work in a leafy a part of Abuja to a close-by ring highway. He pulls over within the shade of an overpass and steps onto the grime shoulder. A concrete manhole cowl sits perched alongside one fringe of an open manhole, trying just like the lid of a sarcophagus.

Pointing on the gap, Aliyu explains how simple it’s for native gangs, referred to as space boys, to steal elements or minimize the cables, forcing spine suppliers and ISPs to strike unofficial safety offers with the boys, or the extra highly effective, shadowy males behind them. After all, a part of the issue is self-inflicted: Sloppy work crews depart manholes open and expose the cables to potential injury from nesting animals or a stray cigarette butt that ignites tumbleweed and melts the cables.

Phase3 and different telecom firms are additionally contending with the expense of changing the primary era of fiber-optic cables, now about 20 years previous, in addition to upgrading PoP {hardware} to extend capability. They’re spending cash not simply to achieve new prospects, but additionally to supply aggressive service to current prospects.

For cell operators equivalent to Globacom, there’s the extra problem of making certain dependable energy for his or her base stations. They usually depend on diesel or gasoline mills to again up grid energy, however gas shortage, infrastructure theft, and provide chain points can undermine base station reliability.

How Nigeria’s offline half lives

The hamlet of Tungan Ashere is 3 km northwest of the most important worldwide airport serving Abuja. To get right here, you permit the freeway and drive previous cinder-block huts with conventional reed roofs. The facet of the grime highway is adorned with concrete pylons ready to be strung with energy strains however nonetheless bare because the day they had been put in in 2021. Individuals right here farm cassava, watermelon, yam, and corn. Some hold small herds of goats and cattle. To get to market, they’ll journey on one in all a handful of dirt-bike taxis.

Photo of a plastic tarp covering a round green structure on a platform, with a group of people gathered inside. A building with solar panels is in the background. In Tungan Ashere, the Web hub operated by the Centre for Data Expertise and Improvement attracts residents.Andrew Esiebo

When somebody in Tungan Ashere desires to make an announcement, they stroll to a distinguished tree and ring a inexperienced bar of scrap metallic wedged at about head peak within the tree’s branches. The metallic resonates, not fairly like a church bell, nevertheless it serves an analogous objective. “The bell, it’s to inform all people to fall asleep, to get up, if there’s an announcement. It’s an historic manner of speaking,” explains Lukman Aliu, a telecom engineer who drove me right here.

The idea of connectivity within the village differs from only a few kilometers away on the airport, the place passengers can take pleasure in free high-speed Wi-Fi within the consolation of a café. But the potential advantages of inexpensive broadband entry for folks residing in locations like Tungan Ashere are monumental.

Usman Isah Dandari is attempting to fulfill that want. He’s a technical assistant on the Centre for Data Expertise and Improvement (CITAD), a nonprofit primarily based in Kano, Nigeria. Dandari coordinates a handful of neighborhood networking initiatives, together with one in Tungan Ashere. Higher broadband right here would assist farmers observe market costs, assist college students full their homework, and make it simpler for farmers and craftspeople to promote their items. CITAD makes use of a combination of {hardware}, together with Starlink terminals and mobile modems, to supply comparatively dependable broadband to areas uncared for by industrial operators. The group can also be contemplating utilizing Nigeria’s nationwide satellite tv for pc operator, NigComSat, and dealing with the Nigerian Communications Fee to decrease the prices.

Photo of a man in Nigerian garb standing in front of a seated group of mainly children who are looking at tablets. Usman Isah Dandari [standing] coordinates a number of initiatives just like the one in Tungan Ashere, to supply inexpensive broadband entry.Andrew Esiebo

A number of meters away from the scrap-metal bell in Tungan Ashere is a one-story constructing painted rust purple, topped with a pastel inexperienced corrugated metallic roof and eight photo voltaic panels, which energy a pc lab inside. There’s no grid electrical energy right here, however the photo voltaic panels are sufficient to run a CITAD-provided mobile modem, just a few desktop computer systems, and a formidable ground fan among the time.

Most of the folks within the village as soon as lived the place the airport is now. The Nigerian authorities displaced them when it selected the area as the brand new federal capital territory in 1991. Since then, successive native governments have supplied companies piecemeal, often within the runup to elections. The result’s a string of communities like Tungan Ashere—10,000 folks in all—that also lack working water, paved roads, grid electrical energy, and dependable Web. These folks could dwell on the sting of Nigeria’s broadband spine, however they reap few of its advantages.

A personal undersea cable reveals do it

Not each undersea cable rollout has been fraught. In 2005, electrical engineer Funke Opeke was working at Verizon Communications in the US. MTN, an African telecom firm, employed her to assist it construct its submarine cables. Then Nitel employed her to assist handle its privatization. There, she noticed up shut how the group was failing to get the Web from SAT-3 into Nigerians’ lives.

Photo of a woman seated at a table with her hands folded in front of her. Funke Opeke based MainOne to construct Nigeria’s first personal undersea fiber-optic cable.George Osodi/Bloomberg/Getty Pictures

“I don’t suppose it was a query of capital or return on funding, coverage, or curiosity,” Opeke says. As a substitute, officers favored suppliers providing kickbacks over these with competent bids.

Seeing a possibility for a well-managed submarine cable, Opeke approached personal traders about growing a cable of their very own. The result’s the MainOne cable, which arrived in Lagos in 2010 and is operated by the corporate of the identical title. MainOne supplied the primary personal competitors to Nitel’s SAT-3 and Globacom’s Glo-1, which started service in 2010. (MTN’s two cables landed in Nigeria in 2011.)

At first, the MainOne cable suffered the identical downside because the others—its capability wasn’t reaching customers. “After we constructed, there was no distribution,” Opeke, who’s now an advisor with MainOne, says. So the corporate received its personal ISP license and started constructing fiber hyperlinks into main metro areas—ultimately greater than 1,200 km in states close to its undersea-cable touchdown website. It ended up providing a extra full service than initially meant, bringing the Web from abroad, onshore, throughout Nigeria, and the final kilometers into companies and houses, and it attracted greater than 800 enterprise shoppers.

MainOne’s success compelled the publicly held telecoms and the cell suppliers to compete. “The cell networks had been constructed for voice, they usually weren’t investing quick sufficient” in knowledge capability, Opeke says. MainOne did make investments, serving to to create the broadband capability wanted for Nigeria’s first knowledge facilities. It then diversified into knowledge facilities, and in 2022 bought its entire enterprise to American data-center large Equinix.

Different firms, together with the most important cell operators, additionally started constructing fiber between Nigerian cities, duplicating one another’s infrastructure. The issue is that they didn’t provide aggressive costs to unbiased ISPs that wished to piggyback on these new fiber-optic hyperlinks, says the telecom analyst Odufuwa.

And neither the general public sector nor the personal sector is assembly the wants of Nigerians on the backside of the market, particularly in rural communities equivalent to Tungan Ashere and Atan. A vital first step shall be to enhance the reliability of {the electrical} grid, Opeke says, which can assist drive down prices for telecom operators and different companies, and create a virtuous cycle for additional development.

Virtually everybody Spectrum interviewed for this story stated safety is one other problem: If Nigerian states and the federal authorities might make sure the safety of the infrastructure, telecom operators would make investments extra in increasing their networks. Constructing telecom infrastructure is nicely inside the attain of Nigerian engineers. “Nigeria doesn’t have a ability downside,” Opeke says. “It has a possibility downside.”

If the bureaucrats, businesspeople, and engineers can overcome these coverage and technical hurdles, the unconnected half of Nigerians stand to achieve lots. Dependable broadband in Atan would draw extra younger folks to agriculture, says the farmer and sociologist Bolaji Adeniyi: “It is going to present jobs.” Then, like Adeniyi, perhaps these younger related Nigerians will rethink whether or not farming is simply father’s work—maybe it may very well be their future, too.

Particular due to IEEE Senior Member John Funso-Adebayo for his help with the logistics and reporting for this story.

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