Lagos - Mobile-phone users in Nigeria will be able to
change service providers and retain their numbers under new regulations from
today, increasing competition between companies including MTN Group Ltd. and
Bharti Airtel Ltd.
The new rules are among a series of measures introduced
by the regulator, the Nigerian Communications Commission, to help increase
competition and deliver more benefits to consumers, Reuben Muoka, a spokesman
for the NCC, said in a phone interview from Abuja, the capital, on April 19.
Rates for calls between different phone companies were set 40 percent lower
from April 1.
“Number portability will further foster competition on
prices and quality of services,” Muoka said. “The reduction of termination
rates followed a study on interconnect cost in the industry, and is with this
in mind that operators will drop charges to subscribers.”
Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation with more than 160
million people, had about 155 million telephone subscribers as of January,
according to the NCC. The global system of mobile communication, or GSM,
accounts for 138 million customers or 89 percent of the country’s phone users,
followed by the Code Division Multiple Access, or CDMA, network with 14 million
customers. Fixed lines amount to 2.4 million users.
Price War
“A price war should emerge soon and tighten revenue,”
Akintola Salami, an analyst at Lagos-based Financial Derivatives Co., said in
an e-mailed response to questions. Subscribers will probably benefit, he said.
MTN, based in Johannesburg, is the Nigerian market leader
wih 47 million subscribers as of the end of last year, according to data on the
NCC’s website. Nigeria’s Globacom Ltd. had 24 million users, Mumbai-based
Bharti Airtel 23 million, and Abu Dhabi-based Emirates Telecommunications
Corp., known as Etisalat, 14 million. In an industry with 25 operators, the top
four have about two-thirds of the market.
The new pricing system seeks to protect new entrants and
smaller operators than the top four, Muoka said.
While mobile-phone operators in Nigeria face “a reduction
in voice revenue,” there is “an opportunity in data services to cushion the
effect,” Gbenga Adebayo, president of the Association of Licensed Telecom
Operators of Nigeria, said by phone from Lagos on April 19.
MTN invested $1.3 billion last year to expand its network
in Nigeria, and Airtel and Etisalat have announced additional investments to
improve their speed and capacity.
Other challenges facing the companies include frequent
power cuts and the sabotage of phone facilities in the country’s mainly Muslim
north, where Islamist militants target telecommunications companies for helping
the authorities to track them. - Bloomberg News
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