Information and communications technology experts in the country have urged governments at all levels to ease policies on deployment of telecommunications infrastructure as MTN and Huawei plan to launch mobile Internet of Things (IoT) next year.
The two operators have announced launch dates for Narrowband Internet of Things (NB-IoT) solutions in Nigeria by the end of 2018.
Narrowband IoT wireless technology will enable MTN to develop vertical industry applications for usage based Insurance, Smart Refrigeration for commercial bottling market, and smart Water Metering.
Mohammed Rudman, managing director, Internet Exchange Point of Nigeria (IXPN), said that a smart water metering solution enables the automated collection of utility meter data, while manual meter reading leads to high labour costs and inaccurate data.
He said: “for these to happen, governments need to assist operators to increase base stations in the country because operators will have to upgrade their base stations and build new ones for mobile internet of Things to work. The process of securing ‘Right of way’ by operators should be made easier as base stations will be connected via fibre links and cost should also be lowered”.
He decried a situation where government stops building of new base station in some cities, “you can’t increase capacity without building new base station. Because operators are not building additional base stations that the industry is faced with congestion that results to poor quality of service,” he said.
Chris Uwaje, Africa Chair for World Forum on Internet of Things (IoTs), corroborating Rudman on need to expand capacity, said: “To date, the world has deployed about 5 billion “smart” connected things. Predictions say there will be 50 billion connected devices by 2020 translates to over USD20 trillion dollars.
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