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Telcos may suffer $1.5bn loss on Apapa Road repairs

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Telcos may suffer $1.5bn loss on Apapa Road repairs

Of all business outfits in the Apapa area of Lagos, the telecoms sector, it is feared, may suffer a staggering loss of about $1.5 billion over the reconstruction of Wharf Road, Apapa, the main port city in Nigeria, Ripples Nigeria findings have revealed.

The estimated loss would be borne by four GSM companies namely MTN, Airtel, Globacom and Etisalat, each having their masts and underground cables located in Apapa, which is a hub of business activities in the commercial city-state of Lagos.

This is because the repair work, planned to last one year, will see most of the telecom facilities damaged beyond repair.

To that effect, all companies with cables on the rights of way were said to have been officially informed by the Ministry of Power, Works and Housing to begin the process of dismantling their masts and cables which had been marked for removal during the construction work.

The spokesman of the Minister, Mr Babatunde Fashola, Akeem Bello, said an all stakeholders meetings held before the signing of the memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the two private firms involved in the repair work, Flour Mills Ltd and Dangote Plc, and that other various business interests in the area were made to understand the implications of total rehabilitation of the road.

None of the telcos, however, agreed to confirm that such meetings held with them in attendance.

They claimed that they only learnt of government plans to have some private sector participation in the road re-constructions in the news and have on their own begun calculation of the cost of such work on their facilities in the area.

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Contacted for comments, both Airtel and Etisalat officials said that the position of their respective managements on the development would be made public soon.

However, an MTN senior management staff, on condition of anonimity, told Ripples Nigeria that it would cost an estimated $30 million to put up a base station, whereas Apapa alone houses more stations than any other part of the country.

The IHS Towers, a major masts-related services provider, speaking through its media manager, Akin Kolawole, confirmed that the relocation of telecoms cables, masts and other related equipment will cost fortunes.

“In most cases, all the wires and other materials, removed from a location are often discarded, meaning that new ones may be acquired.

“This will happen with the Apapa Road re-construction as far as the telecoms cables are concerned.

“Apapa has other cables from companies that have to do with communication, meaning that by the time all other costs are added, more than $1.5 billion being estimated will be a child’s play.

“To that effect, even the telecos’ services will be interrupted during the relocation of the masts and cables in the area,” Kolawole said.

 

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0 Comments

  1. Anita Kingsley

    June 25, 2017 at 7:42 pm

    Wow!!! The money is quite much, over $1.5 billion isn’t child’s play at all. Can the ministry find other means that won’t affect the telecoms cables and masts?

    • seyi jelili

      June 26, 2017 at 5:46 am

      Ask google that question. They are not the only ones that will be affected. Others will feel the brunt as well like shop owners and the likes

  2. Animashaun Ayodeji

    June 25, 2017 at 7:43 pm

    This is the problem with a lot of Nigerian companies, we often fail to plan ahead. If the telecommunications company had conducted proper investigations before burying their cables ad planting their masts in that location, they’d have known construction will occur there sooner or later.

    • Abeni Adebisi

      June 25, 2017 at 7:44 pm

      That’s very silly of them all, four companies that can be regarded as giants made the same mistake and now they have to pay the price. There’s nothing they can do, to remain in business, they have to bear the loss very fast.

  3. yanju omotodun

    June 26, 2017 at 6:02 am

    They just have to repair the road no matter who and who is going to be affected. After all, they will be the ones to thank the government after the repair because it will blossom their businesses in the long run

    • JOHNSON PETER

      June 26, 2017 at 6:12 am

      You will suffer it most. No browsing, no facebook and twitter

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