DUBLIN–(BUSINESS WIRE)–The “Chad
– Telecoms, Mobile and Broadband – Statistics and Analyses”
report has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com’s
offering.
During the last decade Chad’s economy has been dominated by oil exports,
and as a result economic growth has been adversely affected by the
falling prices for the commodity on international markets. Economic
difficulties, with a sharp fall in GDP recorded for 2017, have been
exacerbated by civil unrest and by an influx of refugees from
neighbouring countries. Declining revenue has encouraged the government
to attempt to renegotiate the terms of licences which only grant it
12.5% of revenue from oil exports, while it has also endeavoured to
access oil money held in an escrow account set up by the World Bank and
intended to be used to alleviate poverty.
The country remains one of the least developed on the continent, while
telecom infrastructure is particularly poor, with penetration rates in
all sectors fixed, mobile and internet well below African averages.
Nevertheless, despite difficult operating conditions, large scale
poverty and low spending power, Chad’s telecom market offers some
potential for investors to develop services given the low starting base.
The tax on mobile operators has been increased in stages in recent
years, from 4% in 2014 to 7% in 2016. In January 2018 it was increased
again, to 9%. Of this, the Treasury received 4%, the regulator 2.5%, the
Information and Communication Technologies Development Agency (ADETIC)
1.5%, the National School of Information and Communication Technologies
(ENASTIC) 0.6% and ANSCIE 0.4%. In addition to this tax an 18% excise
duty was introduced in 2016 on telecom services, which has resulting in
lower usage among subscribers and consequently a negative impact on
operator revenue.
The two main operators Tigo Chad and Airtel Chad have invested in
infrastructure and have become the main providers of voice and data
services. However, the difficult economic conditions of the country,
compounded by a tax on telecom services which has adversely affected
customer spend and consequently on operator revenue, have encouraged
these players to consider exiting the market. Tigo Chad’s parent company
Millicom International entered into discussions with Orange Group in
April 2017 and with Econet in the following October regarding a
potential sale, while in May 2017 Bharti Aircom announced that Chad was
one of its regional markets which it considered offloading. Tigo Chad
was sold to Maroc Telecom in March 2019, marking the latter’s entry into
a market which it has shown an interest in since 2014.
The mobile sector has developed steadily under the auspices of Tigo Chad
and Airtel Chad. The national telco and fixed-line operator Sotel Tchad
(ST) operates the country’s third mobile network, as Salam Mobile. Salam
Mobile is mainly focussed on voice services since its dependence on GPRS
and EDGE technologies offer only basic mobile data services. The
country’s first 3G/4G mobile licence was awarded in April 2014.
Chad finally gained access to international fibre bandwidth in 2012, but
it still lacks a national backbone infrastructure to support efficient
broadband services. However, the World Bank-funded Central African
Backbone (CAB) project has made progress, and Chad is also party to a
Trans-Saharan Backbone project which will link a fibre cable to Nigeria
and Algeria. Investment in the national backbone is continuing though
progress across all 12 sectors has been hampered by delays.
Key Developments:
-
Chad agrees to mobile roaming regulation along with the G5 Sahal
countries; - Maroc Telecom completes acquisition of Tigo Chad;
- Regulator critical of MNOs’ poor quality of service;
-
Presta Bist Telecoms increases satellite broadband capacity from O3b
Networks by 66%; -
Government introduces 18% tax on telecom services, tax on mobile
operators increased to 9%; - Tigo Chad extends LTE services;
- Continuing expansion of national fibre backbone infrastructure;
-
Report update includes the regulator’s market updates, activity report
for 2016, operator data to December 2018, Telecom Maturity Index
charts and analyses, recent market developments.
Key Topics Covered:
1 Key statistics
2 Country overview
3 Telecommunications market
3.1 Market analysis
4 Regional Africa Market Comparison
4.1 TMI vs GDP
4.2 Mobile and mobile broadband
4.3 Fixed and mobile broadband
5 Regulatory environment
5.1 Telecommunications Act 1998
5.2 Regulatory authority
5.3 Quality of service (QoS)
5.4 Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
6 Fixed network operator
6.1 Sotel Tchad
7 Telecommunications infrastructure
7.1 Data centres
7.2 International infrastructure
7.3 Submarine fibre optic cables
7.4 The Central African Backbone (CAB)
7.5 Other projects
8 Broadband market
8.1 Introduction and statistical overview
9 Mobile communications
9.1 Market analysis
9.2 Regulatory issues
9.3 Mobile infrastructure
9.4 Other infrastructure developments
9.5 Major mobile operators
9.6 Mobile content and applications
Companies Mentioned
- Sotel Tchad
- TchadNet
- Bharti Airtel (Airtel Chad)
- Millicom (Tigo Chad)
- Tchad Mobile (Orascom)
- Sitcom
- Salam Mobile
- Maroc Telecom
For more information about this report visit https://www.researchandmarkets.com/r/lizz09
Contacts
ResearchAndMarkets.com
Laura Wood, Senior Press Manager
[email protected]
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Related
Topics: Telecommunications
and Networks, Broadband,
Mobile
Networks