The
prolonged struggle to overcome the power crisis is a major obstacle to
broadband penetration in the country, OZIOMA UBABUKOH writes The Federal
Government must resolve the power infrastructure shortcomings in the country
and formulate good broadband policies to attract N3tn investment in data
centre deployment, analysts have said. Data centres are critical to the
provision of faster and cheaper Internet connectivity and President Muhammadu
Buhari as well as the Ministry of Communications have said approximately 300
of such centres are required to support affordable Internet services and
software applications in the country. The President and the ministry believe
the development of data centres will also help to stop data hosting overseas,
which aids capital flight. However, findings from our correspondent showed
that a world class data warehouse would cost between $20m and $30m. This
means that Nigeria currently requires an investment of approximately N3tn for
its planned 300 data centres.Foreign Information Technology companies such as
Google Incorporated, Microsoft Corporation and Oracle, at various fora, have
said they will be willing to invest in this area. The companies, however,
expressed concern that five years after the landing of fibre optic submarine
cables on Nigeria’s shores, the country had been unable to speed up the pace
of wholesale fibre access due to the absence of a broadband policy that would
promote infrastructure sharing and competition. “Technology firms, such as
Google, are interested in investing hugely in data centres if Nigeria can
address the power challenge and speedily tackle the issue of last mile
connectivity and distribution capacity, so as to spread available bandwidth
capacity across the entire country,” says the Communications Manager,
Anglophone West Africa, Google, Taiwo Kola-Ogunlade. The Director, Business
and Strategy, Kits Technologies, a data centre infrastructure provider,
Taofeek Okoya, says stable power supply is critical. He explains, “Yes,
broadband infrastructure is important, but power is even more critical.
Today, Nigeria is still struggling with unstable power supply. Importantly,
data centres consume a lot of electricity. “Nigeria is, indeed, a huge market
and the potential here is enormous for local and foreign IT companies. As I
speak, there are lots of data centre initiatives ongoing in the country. A
lot of banks and government agencies are building data centres.” Source:
Punch
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Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Poor power supply hinders N3tn investment in data centres
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