Technology

Highlights of President Tinubu’s Reforms in the Telecommunications Sector

In the early days of Nigeria’s mobile revolution, the promise was simply to deliver connectivity. A signal, a call, a message delivered. Two decades on, that promise feels almost quaint. What Nigerians now demand—what they increasingly expect—is something more intimate and exacting: a system that works not just in theory, but in the texture of daily life.

Under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the country’s telecommunications policy has begun to pivot toward that expectation. The shift is subtle in language but significant in consequence. From access to experience, from expansion to accountability, from infrastructure to impact.

At the surface, the changes are easy to catalogue. Fewer dropped calls when compared to years ago—people forget how bad things were so quickly. Faster browsing speeds on High Definition screens. More reliable coverage in places that once flickered on the edge of service. Beneath these incremental improvements lies a broader reordering of how the telecom ecosystem functions—and who it ultimately serves.

For years, the Nigerian telecom user operated in a fog of uncertainty, and where anything given had to be taken. Tariff plans were dense and often opaque, with hidden charges embedded in fine print or obscured by complexity. Today, a new regime of tariff simplification has begun to impose clarity: first, fewer plans, second, standardized disclosures, and third advance notice for price changes. It is, in effect, a quiet rebalancing of power—placing information, and therefore choice, back in the hands of consumers.

Transparency, however, is not confined to pricing. In a country where network outages once arrived without explanation, the introduction of a centralized outage reporting system marks a cultural shift. This is the NCC’s Major Network Outage Reporting portal. Operators are now compelled to disclose disruptions, explain causes, and provide timelines for restoration. The significance of this goes to the root of the relationship between the operators and consumers: and that is trust in the system. And trust, in a digital economy, is currency.

If transparency addresses the user’s experience, enforcement addresses the system itself. Under President Tinubu, the NCC has strengthened its quality-of-service regulations. Its new regulations gives it powers to extend accountability beyond operators to infrastructure providers—who are key to ensuring network quality is delivered. This signals a recognition that poor service is rarely accidental. It is systemic. Even the seemingly mundane crackdown on illegal signal boosters speaks to this logic: small distortions, multiplied across a network, can degrade performance at scale. Removing them is less about policing and more about restoring equilibrium.

Employing the powers of its 2024 regulations, the NCC has recently directed Mobile Network Operators to pay compensation to consumers across the country who made calls, data services or sent SMS in areas where those operators failed to meet Quality of Service key performance indicators. This compensation signals a trend of accountability and transparency among regulators under the President Tinubu administration.

Yet perhaps the most consequential reforms are those that operate at the intersection of identity, finance, and security. The full enforcement of SIM registration linkage to National Identity Numbers (NINs) within the first year of President Tinubu’s coming into office has effectively ended anonymous participation in Nigeria’s telecom and invariably, the digital space. In practical terms, this has implications for crime prevention and financial fraud. In broader terms, it represents the consolidation of a digital identity architecture—one that underpins everything from mobile banking to civic participation.

That architecture has already proven its importance. When a protracted dispute between banks and telecom operators threatened to disrupt USSD services—the backbone of everyday financial transactions for millions—it was resolved at scale, restoring stability to a system many Nigerians rely on more than formal banking interfaces. The introduction of clearer, user-controlled billing for these services further underscores a recurring theme: transparency not as an abstract ideal, but as a functional necessity.

Behind these consumer-facing reforms by the telecommunication regulator, under President Tinubu lies a less visible, but equally critical, effort to stabilize the industry itself.

Telecom networks do not improve in isolation; they depend on capital, governance, and policy certainty. The decision to allow tariffs to better reflect operational realities has unlocked significant investment—over a Trillion Naira in a single year—fueling the expansion of network infrastructure and the deployment of thousands of new sites. In 2025 alone, operators deployed over 2800 new sites that deliver improved capacity and increased coverage of their networks.

It is a reminder that affordability and sustainability must be carefully balanced; a system that is too constrained to invest cannot improve. And President Tinubu and his team understand this.

Governance reforms, too, play a quiet but decisive role. Stronger corporate oversight, risk management, and cybersecurity preparedness are not the kind of changes that make headlines. But they determine whether networks fail or endure, whether data is compromised or protected. In this sense, reliability is as much a product of boardroom discipline as it is of engineering.

The NCC has reviewed its Guidlines for Corporate Governance in the telecommunications industry to strengthen the sector’s capacity to deliver quality to Nigerians. The regulator has also launched the first Cyber Resilience Framework for the Telecommunications sector.

For Nigeria’s young population—arguably the most digitally engaged demographic in Africa—these shifts are beginning to shape opportunity in tangible ways. The expansion of ICT parks and digital innovation hubs across universities—started under the late President Buhari administration but completed under President Tinubu—is creating physical spaces where ideas can be tested and scaled. A regulatory sandbox now allows startups to experiment within the telecom ecosystem without prohibitive barriers. And partnerships with Nokia that train young engineers on 4G and 5G technologies are quietly building the human infrastructure required to sustain growth.

The result is an emerging feedback loop: better networks enable new businesses; new businesses create jobs; a growing digital economy demands even better networks. It is a cycle that, if maintained, could redefine Nigeria’s economic trajectory.

There is also a symbolic dimension to recent policy choices. The designation of telecom infrastructure as Critical National Information Infrastructure (CNII) by President Bola Tinubu elevates it from commercial asset to national priority. In a country where fibre cuts and equipment theft have long disrupted service, this signals a shift in how connectivity is valued—and protected.

And yet, for all the structural reforms, the true measure of President Tinubu’s reforms in the telecommunications sector remains stubbornly personal. It is in the student who can attend an online class without interruption, the entrepreneur who can process payments seamlessly, the young developer testing an idea in a campus innovation hub. It is in the mundane reliability of a system that, increasingly, fades into the background because it simply works.

Nigeria’s telecom story is still being written. The gains are uneven, the challenges persistent. But there is a discernible movement—from a system that merely connects, to one that supports, protects, and empowers.

In the end, that may be the most meaningful transformation of all: not the presence of a signal, but the confidence that it will be there when it matters.

Sandra Pam Gyang is a technology enthusiast and writes from Abuja.

Tunde Alade

Tunde is a political Enthusiast who loves using technology to impact his immediate community by providing accurate data and news items for the good of the country.

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