Africa's mobile internet to double in next 5 years

SWITCHED ON: A used-computer vendor attends to a buyer at Lagos’ computer village. A bustling computer market in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital, was allowed to stay in business after pledging to dispose of its dangerous waste properly, traders and officials said.

SWITCHED ON: A used-computer vendor attends to a buyer at Lagos’ computer village. A bustling computer market in Lagos, Nigeria’s commercial capital, was allowed to stay in business after pledging to dispose of its dangerous waste properly, traders and officials said.

Published Nov 7, 2017

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JOHANNESBURG - Africa's mobile internet connections are set to double in the next five years, a study showed yesterday, thanks to affordable smartphones and the roll out of high-speed networks. 

A report by research and consulting firm Ovum in London estimates that mobile broadband connections will rise from 419million at the end of this year to 1.07billion by the end of 2022. 

“Data connectivity is growing strongly in Africa, and there are also good prospects on the continent in areas such as digital media, mobile financial services and the Internet of Things,” said Matthew Reed, the practice leader for Middle East and Africa at Ovum. 

“But as Africa’s TMT market becomes more convergent and complex, service providers are under increasing pressure to make the transition from being providers of communications services, and to become providers of digital services.” Mobile-phone operators such as MTN, Orange and Bharti Airtel are investing heavily in high-speed networks to meet demand from users, who are increasingly using phones for everything from paying their bills to streaming videos and surfing the net. 

- REUTERS 

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