#MP2013 Presentation by the Minister of Communication Technology

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Ministry of Communication Technology MID-TERM REVIEW presentation made at the:

MINISTERIAL PLATFORM by

THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY MRS OMOBOLA JOHNSON TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013


Outline • Introduction: the story so far • Mid-term Review: Ministry Priorities – Connect Nigeria – Connect Nigerians – Innovation, Job Creation and Local Content – ICT in Government – Enabling Environment

• Conclusion: the next two years © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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INTRODUCTION


The story so far • Ministry created in 2011 out of a recognition of the role of ICT: – economic development  wealth and job creation – social development  facilitating expansion of social service delivery across dispersed population

• Concentration of focal ICT agencies under one umbrella – achieving better sectorial performance by reducing duplication – capitalising on synergies between complementary agencies – achieving economies of scale and scope to deliver value to the Nigerian economy and society © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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MID-TERM REVIEW


Ministry Priorities To deliver on the promises of the transformation agenda by addressing the challenges in the ICT industry and leveraging the opportunities in ICT for socio-economic development: Speed up the building out of communications infrastructure so that all of Nigeria has access to good quality telecom services and high-speed internet

CONNECT NIGERIA Š Hamilton Research Ltd., 2013

CONNECT NIGERIANS Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

Ensure that Nigerians have affordable and reliable access to devices and have the capacity to use them; so that all Nigerians can share in the benefits of ICTs 6


Ministry Priorities LOCAL CONTENT

Lower the barriers to entry and increase the participation of Nigerian companies in the ICT sector; and stimulate job creation in the industry

ICT IN GOVERNMENT

Increase the adoption of ICTs by government to achieve greater transparency, efficiency, and productivity in governance and citizen engagement

ENABLING ENVIRONMENT

Provide a predictable and stable environment that supports the development of the ICT sector

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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 CONNECT NIGERIA


Connect Nigeria Increased Access to ICT Services

2011

2012

2013

2015

% Teledensity • Fixed lines • Mobile subscriptions

0.5% 68.5%

1.5% 71.5%

1.8% 83%

10% 98%

% of Population with Internet access • % Access of rural population

29% 1.5%

34% 1.6%

36%

42%

% Mobile phone coverage of rural areas

NA

40%

NA

60% 100% by 2017

Cost of Broadband subscription (3Gb package/yr)

N93,000

Speed of Broadband Access (Mb/sec)

1.0*

N72,000

N60,000

N36,000 50% Reduction

1.8*

2.4*

5.0

* Actual speeds are of those available in cities (Lagos, Abuja, Port-Harcourt) © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Connect Nigeria • Context: – Whilst the number of mobile (GSM) subscribers is increasing, fixed line subscribers has stagnated, and fixed wireless declined – Connectivity is concentrated in urban, commercial areas; approx. 40% of rural areas has no mobile coverage – Challenges in the operating environment are constituting a limiting factor on further expansion of telecom networks and quality of service

• What we need to do: – Increase the spread and scope (i.e. types of technologies) of communications infrastructure across Nigeria – Prioritise roll-out to un-served and under-served areas © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Infrastructure Expansion 2010 versus 2013

MICROWAVE TRANSMISSION # of Base Stations

FIBRE-OPTIC UNDERSEA Capacity (Tb/sec)

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

FIBRE-OPTIC TERRESTRIAL Distance (Km)

SATELLITE # of Satellites Covering country

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Microwave Transmission btw 4,000 to 5,000

The pace of growth has however slowed even as some existing base stations have been decommissioned as a result of terror attacks, theft and vandalisation

The number of base stations in Nigeria has increased exponentially since the inception of GSM providers. From 116 in 2001 to about 21,000 by 2010

MICROWAVE TRANSMISSION # of Base Stations

FIBRE-OPTIC UNDERSEA Capacity (Tb/sec)

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

FIBRE-OPTIC TERRESTRIAL Distance (Km)

SATELLITE # of Satellites Covering country

12


Growth in Base Station Deployment Factors impeding/slowing down deployment: 1.Higher set-up and operating costs - due to multiple taxation fees and levies; lack of sustainable power supply; vandalisation and theft of equipment 2.Delays and ‘opportunity costs’ - due to multiple regulation and unstandardised application and approval processes 3.Security challenges - vulnerability of infrastructure and personnel

About 150 Base Stations were lost in 2012 due to bombings and flooding; twice as many dependent Base Stations were also affected

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Where We Are Now and Where We Need To Be Circa 60,000

Significantly more base stations need to be deployed across the country to meet national target of a five-fold increase in broadband penetration by 2018

27,000

2013

Operators committed to spend at least US$6bn on infrastructure as from 2013

2018

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

Includes US$3bn syndicate loan facility extended to major operator in the market = biggest financial deal in sub-Saharan Africa Communications Sector

However, investment hampered by: • Increasing incidences and values of taxes and levies requested by States • delays in obtaining approval to build Base Stations Request for N250m Ecology Tax from operators to deploy Base Stations Operators waiting for 6 months for approval to deploy 300 Base Stations 14


What the Ministry has Done • Facilitated increased confidence in the Nigerian communications sector leading to willingness to increase investment in infrastructure – Secured commitment of Government at the highest level • His Excellency, Mr President facilitated merger of three (3) CDMA operators • His Excellency, Mr Vice President led Delegation to ITU Telecom World 2012

• Engaged with industry stakeholders to identify challenges and negotiate solutions – Secured agreement with State Governments via National Economic Council to eliminate multiple taxation and streamline application and approval processes – Harmonised regulation of base stations between NCC and NESREA

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Extending communications infrastructure to un-served and under-served areas – Accelerated Mobile Phone Expansion (AMPE-BTS) programme is helping to deploy Base Stations in rural areas • Total of 54 Base Stations installed; 28 more planned for 2013

– Rural Broadband Initiative (RUBI) provides wholesale internet bandwidth to ISPs, Cyber cafes, and ICT centres like Community Communication Centres (CCC) in rural communities • Of the 18 pilot sites selected, 12 are 95% complete and transmission testing is currently on-going in Akure and Osogbo

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Fibre-Optic Networks Since then an additional 5.1 Tb/s of capacity has been added making a total of 10Tb/s

The roll-out of the terrestrial fibre-optic network is not keeping pace with the increasing international bandwidth landing on Nigeria’s shores

This total is expected to increase further to a potential 15Tb/s by the end of the year

Approx. 30,000km of fibre had been laid as at 2010. Additional 11,000km was laid since then (of which 4,000 over power line)

Access to a potential 4.76Tb/s of international bandwidth capacity as at time Ministry was created

However additional fibre is mainly duplications along a few commercial routes FIBRE-OPTIC UNDERSEA Capacity (Tb/sec)

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

FIBRE-OPTIC TERRESTRIAL Distance (Km)

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National Backbone Network Pace of deployment influenced by amount operators have available for actual construction once permits and levies have been paid for

Š Hamilton Research Ltd., 2013

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Build Cost – Long Haul (“Inter-State”) Right-of-Way

Taxes & Levies

Civil Works, Fibre & Equipment

40%

20%

40%

5

93%

BEFORE

AFTER

Worked with the Federal Ministry of Works to review regulations on Federal Right of Way (RoW) Result is that process of applying for RoW has been standardised and applications are processed within 21 days. Furthermore, the price of RoW has been reduced to N145,000 per linear km © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

Percentages are indicative** 19


Build Cost – Metro (“Intra-City”) Right-of-Way

Taxes & Levies

Civil Works, Fibre & Equipment

40%

30%

20%

Procurement of right of way in States ranges between N690,000 to N6.5m per linear km

5 10

BEFORE

Includes: Yearly Operating Levy, Ecology Tax, Sanitation Levy, Town Planning Fee etc.

85%

AGREED Percentages are indicative**

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Worked with Ministry of Works to standardise application process and pricing for right-of-way at Federal level • Developing of legal instruments to secure ICT infrastructure Nationwide • Obtained commitment by State Governments (via the National Economic Council) to collaborate on multiple taxes and regulations – Negotiated single tax payment to all State government agencies on annual basis – Streamlined right-of-way applications to be processed in 30 days and revising price downwards from as high as N6.5m per linear km to N145,000 per linear km – Issue Executive Order protecting key infrastructure pending passage of Critical Infrastructure Bill © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Obtained commitment by Operators to collaborate with State Governments – Operate a “dig-once policy” - make all ducts available on an open access basis to eliminate multiple deployments and damages to State infrastructure – Agreement to lay passive fibre to all State Institutions within 1km of operator’s proposed route – Explore ways to integrate fibre infrastructure in future State-funded projects – e.g. building ducts into new road projects etc.

• Extending communications infrastructure to un-served and under-served areas through Government subsidies – 500km of fibre deployment currently under construction via Backbone Transmission Project (B Train); 3,000km targeted for deployment in 2013/2014 © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Satellite Transmission 11 Satellites currently positioned to provide coverage over Africa Capacity utilised for delivering communications and broadcasting. Represent ‘cheapest’ technology for reaching isolated/rural areas Launched NigComSat-1R satellite in December 2011. Signed MOU with STM Networks Inc. to commercialize all Ka-Band on NigComSat-1R

MICROWAVE TRANSMISSION # of Base Stations

FIBRE-OPTIC UNDERSEA Capacity (Tb/sec)

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

FIBRE-OPTIC TERRESTRIAL Distance (Km)

SATELLITE # of Satellites Covering country

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What the Ministry has Done • Ensured the environment is ‘enabling’ for consumers – Implementation of Mobile Number Portability – Monitoring and/or banning of promotions by operators – Minimising/curbing potential for anti-competitive behaviour • Assessment and declaration of dominant operator(s) in sub-sectors of the mobile market • Review of prices operators charge each other for terminating calls on their network (Interconnection)

– Tariff reduction through implementation of price cap for Short Message Service (SMS)

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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 CONNECT NIGERIANS


Connect Nigerians Key Performance Indicators

2011

2012

2013

2015

Device Ownership / Penetration • Personal Computers • Mobile Devices

NA NA

4.5% 60%

7.0% 70%

12% 82%

Emergency Communications Centers (ECC)

-

-

2

36

# of Public Access Venues

2218

2368

2468

2500

Tertiary Institute Access Project (TIAP)

70

74

-

374

TIAP Ph. II End user devices & electronics

-

17

-

-

TIAP Universities Inter Campus Connectivity

-

-

17

-

Nigerian Research & Education Network (NgREN)

-

-

27

46

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Connect Nigerians • Context: – The rate of adoption of ICTs by Nigerians is low: • 0.9% of Households owned a PC, and a further 3.6% had access to one [NBS Survey, 2011] • 0.5% of Households owned the device they use for accessing the Internet, and a further 3.1% accessed the Internet through other means [NBS Survey, 2011]

– Ownership and adoption rates exhibit socio-demographic patterns • Ownership and adoption rates are lower in rural areas than urban and amongst women then men

– Ownership and use therefore need to be improved overall but more so amongst those with the most to gain from a more inclusive development agenda

• What we need to do: – Make access to infrastructure and devices (PCs and handsets) easier, more affordable – Increase digital awareness and literacy amongst the population © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Public Access Venues (PAVs) Implementation of guidelines on deployment of PAVs is resulting in better coordination and more efficient and equitable spread of resources Community Communication Centre

Community Centre

Post Office

Post Office

Library

Approx. 2,380 PAVs established, however not evenly distributed across the country. Some in very close proximity to one another

School

Rural ICT Centre

Clinic/Health Centre Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Inclusive Development An unacceptably high number of Nigerians are excluded from infrastructures that can meet their basic needs. Increasing the spread of ICTs (mobile phones in particular) can be a means through which this can be corrected.

ICTs contribute to increasing social welfare and security. By being applicable in the delivery of education, health, security and other “basic needs. Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Declared Nigerian students a priority – Collaborated with Ministry of Education, NUC, USPF and Worldbank (STEP-B) to deploy a fibre-optic Research and Education Network • 27 Federal Universities connected by July 2013 (links currently being tested) • 12 Medical Colleges, 28 off campus sites and 9 Federal Universities by Sep 2013 • State Universities, Polytechnics, Colleges of Education in 2014/2015

– Tertiary Institutions Access Project (TIAP) provided desktop computers, printers, wireless network facilities etc. to tertiary institutions • Implemented in 204 Institutions from 2010 – 2012; 74 institutions in 2012 • From 2013, TIAP  Universities Inter-Campus Connectivity providing fibre connectivity between 17 Nigerian Universities and their corresponding Medical Colleges/Teaching Hospitals © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Declared Nigerian students a priority (cont.) – School Access Project (SAP) provided Classmate PCs, with e-learning content and accessories, solar power solutions, high speed internet connectivity and wireless network deployment to government public schools • Implemented in 605 Schools between 2010 – 2012; additional 218 schools in 2013

– Student Computer Ownership Scheme allows students to purchase laptops via low interest rate loan with monthly repayment plan of between N3,500 and N5,800 • All Federal and State Universities now signed up • 50 Universities active on the portal © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Contributed to improving security through establishment of Emergency Communications Centres – Two pilot sites operational (Anambra and Niger States) • Target is to have one emergency response centre in each State • Civil works completed in 25 States; Installation of equipment and connection to telecom operators completed in 11 States

• Contribute to reducing proportion of adult Nigerians excluded from financial services from 46.3% (2010) to 20% by 2020 through: – Reform of Nigeria Postal Services (NIPOST) – Development of postal outlets to become venues for financial and economic inclusion © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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 INNOVATION, JOB CREATION & LOCAL CONTENT


Innovation, Job Creation & Local Content Key Performance Indicators

2011

2012

2013

2015

# successful software companies launched

NA

NA

NA

25

# innovation hubs set up

NA

NA

02

04

Venture capital available to ICT

-

-

$15m

$50m

% of devices assembled in Nigeria

11%

20%

20%

50%

Types of devices assembled in Nigeria

Notebook PCs

Notebook PCs

Notebook PCs Handsets

Notebook PCs Handsets Set-top Box

Average size / turnover of ICT companies

N181.8bn

N183.7bn

N185bn

N200bn

# of handset assembly factories in Nigeria

-

-

02

04

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Innovation, Job Creation & Local Content • Context: – The Nigerian ICT Industry is dominated by international companies – They have: • 70% of the PC market share • 100% of mobile phone market share • 78% market shares of mobile network operators

– Software imports into Nigeria estimated at about US$1bn annually (NOTAP) – Participation of local companies further restricted by predominance of unspecialised value chains  highly fragmented industry and intense competition in limited, ‘fringe’ sub-sectors

• What we needed to do: – Create enabling environment for innovation; lower market-entry barriers and increase the participation of Nigerian companies – Stimulate job creation in the industry © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Creating Virtuous Cycles Nigeria pavilion at ITU World 2012 in Dubai featured young ICT entrepreneurs

Innovation

Local Content

Job Creation

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

Ministry initiatives like Tech Launch Pad identify the best talent and match them to industry Innovation hubs provide platform for talent to develop their solutions, be mentored and learn business skills VC fund aimed at ICTs look to innovation hubs (as well as larger market) for worthwhile projects Local handset manufacture will be key market for: locally designed apps, games, film, TV, blogs, news as well as apps created round data sets released under on-going Open Government Project Locally hosted sites and increased peering points will optimize use of available bandwidth

Digitizing government data sets will create immediate opportunity for entry level ICT jobs Locally sited handset factories as well as improved operations at local OEMs will create new job opportunities for ICT market.

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Growing Local Participation in ICT Industry Value Added Services • • • • • • •

MyPaga Wakanow Dealdey Konga.com Jobberman BudgIT Mairuwa

Infrastructure Service Providers

• iWatch • Pledge 51 (online constitution) • Ticketmobile • Nairalist • Iroko • uConneckt

• Efiko • Asa • Wayopedia

• Veda Computers • Encipher Inye • Websoft - Vantium

• Interra • Console • CNSS Ltd

Research & Development

Software Maintenance & Support Software Installation & Customization

Call Center Operations • • • • • •

Co-Creation Hub Cinfores Varsoft Technologies Mobiqube Tavia technologies Rightclick Nigeria

Software Development Software Distribution & Sales

Access Provision SLOT

Network Service Providers

• Oxygen Broadband Networks • OTG Playa

Device Assembly

Device Sales & Distribution Device Maintenance & Repairs

• Computer Village, Ikeja • Computer Village, Abuja • Banex Plaza, Abuja

Infrastructure Services

Equipment Assembly

Equipment Maintenance & Repairs Equipment Sales & Distribution

Support Services

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

Local representation in the ICT industry is growing with new wave of industry leaders (most below 40 years old and running companies on the average under 5 years).

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What the Ministry has Done • Developed and implemented an IT Incubation Programme to catalyse ICT Industry by helping Nigerian ICT entrepreneurs create successful businesses – Public-private partnership establishing Governmentfacilitated, private-sector managed Innovation Centres • Lagos Centre launched April 2013; Cross-River (Calabar) to be launched July 2013

– Established IT Innovation Fund; first venture capital fund solely focused on ICT businesses • Seed fund provided by Government • Private-sector entity Fund Manager recruited in Jan 2013 • ‘First close’ July 2013 at US$15m.

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Information Technology Developers Entrepreneurship Accelerator (iDEA)

iDEA Centre 296 Herbert Macaulay Way, Yaba, Lagos State Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done TechLaunchPad applicant A: Cutting edge authentication solution for financial services TechLaunchPad Applicant B: Data management solution for the Oil and Gas industry TechLaunchPad Applicant C: Back-office solution for petrol stations

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Implemented initiatives to build local capacity to engage in ICT sector jobs – Partnering with multi-nationals to increase supply of local highly skilled talent in a fast growing sector • SAP launching program to train unemployed graduates in business management and ICT skills • Huawei providing vocational ICT training to 1000 girls • Partnership Agreement with Cisco to build Cisco Academy for highest certification (CCIE: Cisco Certified Internetworking Expert)

– Increasing awareness of existing/new opportunities of employment and equipping Nigerians to take advantage of them • Launch and expansion of e-Lancing and Micro works project in partnership with Federal Ministry of Education (STEP B) and State Governments © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Local content guidelines developed with strong stakeholder input – Stakeholder roundtable conference held in May 2013 • Recommendations to: – Promote appropriate quality assurance and certification standards among local OEMs, software developers • World Bank funding secured for required training (ISO, CMMI) • Recapitalization levels for OEMs to improve stability, resources • Collaboration initiatives to create adequate support structures (communal return / repair and warranty fulfilment centre)

– Guidelines to be issued Q3 2013 © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Strong, on-going collaboration with the Ministry of Industry, Trade & Investment – Developing national local content agenda – Early outcomes show good response from investors entering this space • RLG communications setting up$ 20 M handset, PC, tablet factory in Osun State to commence production in July 2013 • RLG also providing customized ICT training to Osun State youth • Mi-Fone, active in 14 other African countries, is presently setting up a $30 M handset factory – Second technical team visit expected July 2013 – Production commencement planned for Q4 2013 © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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 ICT IN GOVERNMENT


ICT in Government Key Performance Indicators

2011

2012

2013

2015

Number of Government services delivered online

10

30

45

100

Number of MDAs with effective websites

370

420

480

All

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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ICT in Government • Context: – Absence of focal point for the adoption of ICTs by Government, and for governance resulted in: • Inability to capitalise on economies of scale  increased IT expenditure on hardware and services • Lack of coordination and standardisation of technology used by government  high numbers of legacy, proprietary and interoperable systems • Proliferation of non-standardised data sets and duplication of information (often using different formats) • Dispersed infrastructure vulnerable to security threats

• What we needed to do: – Achieve a more comprehensive and integrated use of information and communications technology (ICT) in government to provide better response to citizens’ demands, improve service delivery, and make administration more efficient © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done Connected Government

Ministry has approval of the Federal Executive Council on the following:

Online Service Delivery

© 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

Will lead to delivery of…

Informed Citizenry

•Adoption of IT Shared Services •Establishment of Chief Technology Officer cadre in civil service to bring efficiency into annual budget process for MDA’s IT projects •Advisory services on e-Government Projects to all MDAs •Independent programme management on systems integration projects above N100m •Stimulation of local industry through government procurement (hardware, software, services) •Central Repository of all major government ICT projects •Collaborative approach to content development and maintenance

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What the Ministry has Done • Connected Government – Implemented e-Government priorities of the National ICT Policy • Improved coordination within Federal Government through establishment of ICT cadre in civil service. • Improved coordination extended to States through establishment of National Council of ICT Heads

– Increased capacities of initiatives aimed at connecting MDAs • Over 382 MDAs connected in Abuja and other parts of the country; more than 200 Servers hosted by Galaxy Backbone for more than 94 MDAs • Expanded Government Wide Messaging and Collaboration (GWMC) Technology Platform – deployed over 86,089 email addresses on .gov.ng domain names to provide additional 70,000 in 2013

**Galaxy Backbone’s 1-GOV.net awarded 2013 United Nations Public Service Award in “Promoting Whole-of-Government Approaches in the Information Age” category © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Informed Citizenry – Upgrade of Ministry website and development of standard template; commencement of roll-out across Government – Established 150-seat government contact centre in Abuja (launch date Q3 2013) • Trained 250 Servicom staff in preparation for new roles • Centre will create 1,250 jobs and contribute towards stimulating Call Centre outsourcing

• Online services delivery – Launched Government Services Portal • Selection of services of Ministries of Communication Technology, Education, Health, Agriculture, Trade & Investment now accessible from the portal • Target of adding 25 - 30 services to the Portal each year (up till 2015) © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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What the Ministry has Done • Open Data Programme

– Aims to increase non-sensitive government datasets online in accordance with the Freedom of Information Act • Builds on existing initiatives promoting ‘openness’ such as: Nigeria Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative (NEITI) Act, National Bureau of Statistics Open Data Portal, Bureau for Public Procurement Federal Tenders Portal, release of Federal Government budget online

– Concluded consultancy and workshop phase of programme

• Country assessment, multi-stakeholder workshops and Open Data Stakeholder Forum • Design of Implementation Plan and Technology Roadmap for implementing Open Government Partnership

– Commenced development of implementation plan for improving Open Data amongst Federal Ministries © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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 ENABLING ENVIRONMENT


Enabling Environment • Context: – Separated policies existed for the various sub-sectors of the ICT industry that were being administered with little to no interaction to each other – Absence of an overall policy and identifiable goals resulted in duplication and at times conflict in objectives of sectorial policies

• What we needed to do: – Define and implement a framework to spearhead and guide the development of the Nigerian ICT industry – Align policies and laws to capitalise on opportunities and developments in technology – Attract investment into the industry (local and foreign) – Provide a predictable and stable environment that supports the development of the industry © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

52


What the Ministry has Done Commenced implementation of some priorities of the National ICT Policy

Completion of work by Presidential Broadband Committee and presentation of National Broadband Plan

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

53


 CONCLUSION


Ministry Focus (2013 – 2015) • Continue to enhance enabling environment to ensure Broadband Strategy and Roadmap is successfully rolled out – Critical platform to ensure our targets are met

• Create enabling environment so that expected infrastructure that will support local Cloud Computing offerings is possible – – – –

More local SMEs access to ICT services Increased local hosting Increased Internet peering points More local work opportunities

• Work with training partners to improve locally available training and certification offerings – Cisco, Huawei, IBM, Nokia

• Promote and sustain environment that facilitates emergence of ICT-led ‘frugal’ innovation © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

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Ministry Focus (2013 – 2015) • Work with the Ministry of Trade and Investment – Ensure attractive environment for possible investors, industry partners – Actively court investors, industry partners – Target local production of handheld devices, simple network elements, smart cards, consumables

• Expand Government use of ICTs to increase efficiency and effectiveness of governance – Both internally (within Government) and externally (at interfaces with the private sector and citizens)

• Work with relevant MDAs to increase adoption of ICTs in attainment of national development goals – Agriculture, Education, Health, Banking • Improve use of Hybrid Power by network operators – Reduce dependence on diesel generators at BTS, MTS sites – Increase use of solar, wind, innovative alternates © 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

56


Better Governance

Connectivity

Job Creation

Infrastructure

New Economy

Š 2013. Federal Ministry of Communication Technology

57


Ministry of Communication Technology MID-TERM REVIEW presentation made at the:

MINISTERIAL PLATFORM by

THE HONOURABLE MINISTER OF COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY MRS OMOBOLA JOHNSON TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 2013


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