ALTON Warns States With Hostile Policies Risk Losing Out On $1bn Telecom Investment – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

ALTON Warns States With Hostile Policies Risk Losing Out On $1bn Telecom Investment – Independent Newspaper Nigeria


LAGOS – The Association of Licensed Tele­communications Operators of Nige­ria (ALTON) have issued a warning to state governments to create an enabling environment or risk being excluded from the country’s fast-mov­ing digital growth and telecom invest­ment surge.

ALTON says that multiple levies, bottlenecks in right-of-way approvals, and other unfriendly state policies are slowing expansion and could widen connectivity gaps between regions.

Speaking over the weekend, AL­TON Chairman, Engineer Gbenga Adebayo, said the telecom industry is finally seeing strong investment flows after years of stagnation, but not every state may benefit.

“States that create hostile condi­tions for telecom operations risk be­ing left behind. Where deployment is unwelcome, investments will move to more supportive neighbouring states, and citizens of unfriendly states will inevitably suffer limited connectivi­ty,” Adebayo said.

He stressed that operators are already under enormous pressure, paying as many as 56 different taxes and charges. According to him, relief is expected from January 2026 when the Federal Government’s tax reform bills come into effect, cutting overlap­ping levies across federal, state, and local tiers. “We will not continue to solicit endlessly for cooperation,” Adebayo warned.

Fresh data from the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) shows over $1 billion in telecom infra­structure investments poured into the country this year alone.

That confidence was restored af­ter the regulator allowed mobile net­work operators to adjust tariffs by up to 50%, reversing almost a decade of frozen pricing.

This policy change has triggered aggressive expansion as operators are rolling out new base stations, extending fibre networks, upgrad­ing existing sites, and introducing enhanced site security to counter vandalism.

Adebayo described the current pace of deployment as the most am­bitious since before the COVID-19 pandemic.

The reforms go beyond tariffs and taxation. The inauguration of the new NCC Board, chaired by Idris Olorunimbe, has been described as a stabilising factor for the industry.

The rebranding of 9Mobile to T2 is also seen by stakeholders as a sig­nal of renewed investor interest and strategic repositioning.

Industry players argue that these developments place Nigeria in a bet­ter position to close broadband gaps and expand access to digital services. But without cooperation at state lev­el, experts warn, the benefits will re­main unevenly distributed.

Behind the numbers, operators continue to burn through more than 40 million litres of diesel monthly, most of it imported, to keep networks running. This reality adds to opera­tional costs and stresses why hostile state policies only worsen the finan­cial strain.

The NCC is already working with the Office of the National Security Adviser to create region-specific rapid response systems to protect telecom infrastructure, but Adebayo urged the public to take responsibility as well. Cases of vandalism and stolen equip­ment, he warned, further undermine investments and slow deployment.

For ordinary Nigerians, unfriend­ly state policies could mean slower broadband rollout, fewer digital jobs, and reduced access to critical online services. On the other hand, states that actively support operators stand to benefit from expanded infrastruc­ture, stronger investor confidence, and broader digital inclusion.

You Might Be Interested In





Source: Independent

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *