NIGCOMSAT Revenue Hits ₦2.2 Billion in 2025 Amid Satellite Dispute

Nigerian Communications Satellite Limited (NIGCOMSAT), the country’s state-owned satellite company, reported ₦2.2 billion ($1.6 million) in revenue for 2025, marking a sharp rise from ₦650 million ($470,854) in 2024. Chief Executive Jane Egerton-Idehen described the growth as part of a deliberate upward trajectory, not a one-off spike.

Broadcasting remains the company’s largest revenue driver, accounting for more than half of total earnings. NIGCOMSAT supports over half of Nigeria’s licensed broadcasters, according to Egerton-Idehen. The next phase of growth will hinge on broadband capacity, which she says remains significantly underutilised.

“Our biggest opportunity is broadband,” she said. “That’s where the journey to ₦8 billion ($5.8 million) will come from.”

The target represents a major milestone for a company that spent years rebuilding customer trust after the loss of its first satellite in 2008 and years of declining confidence in its services. NIGCOMSAT says it is targeting multiple segments within the broadband market, including consumer internet, enterprise connectivity, and infrastructure support for telecom operators.

The growth targets come amid an unresolved operational risk. NigComSat-1R, Nigeria’s only working communications satellite, was built for a 15-year lifespan and has been extended to 2028 through technical upgrades. The government plans to replace it with a new satellite that year, followed by another in 2029.

However, an ongoing financial and operational dispute with China Great Wall Industry Corporation (CGWIC), which manages the satellite, has raised questions about its reliability in the interim. Egerton-Idehen acknowledged the trust deficit the company has had to overcome. “We had to win customers back,” she said. “Some left and never returned because of past experiences. Now we are fixing those gaps—service quality, awareness, and technology upgrades.”

A crucial growth area for NIGCOMSAT is cellular backhaul, where satellite capacity is used to connect remote mobile base stations to core networks—particularly critical in rural Nigeria, where laying fibre infrastructure is often uneconomical. State governments have also emerged as a meaningful customer segment, with Adamawa, Gombe, Cross River, and Imo already using NIGCOMSAT’s services for connectivity and digital infrastructure projects.

Beyond commercial services, NIGCOMSAT plays a strategic role in Nigeria’s defence and security architecture. Satellite technology enables secure, real-time communication in areas without terrestrial network coverage, such as forests and offshore waters. Egerton-Idehen explained that military operations rely on satellite-enabled systems installed on moving assets like armoured vehicles and naval ships, allowing them to transmit voice, video, and data back to command centres.

“In environments where there is no mobile coverage, satellite becomes the only option,” she said. “It can be deployed on anything that moves—or doesn’t move—and that’s critical for national security.”

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NIGCOMSAT Revenue Hits ₦2.2 Billion in 2025 Amid Satellite Dispute

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