Monday, May 4, 2026
28.2 C
Lagos

Danbatta: NCC has Powers to Make e-Waste Regulation for Telecom Sector

2021 ITREALMS E-Waste Dialogue …From left: National President, National Association of Telecoms Subscribers (NATCOMS), Chief Adeolu Ogunbanjo, Very Rev. Fr. Augustine Ebido of Dominican University, President, Guild of Corporate Online Publishers and Publisher/Editor Realnews, Ms. Maureen Chigbo, host of 2021 ITREALMS E-Waste Dialogue, Group Executive Editor-in-Chief ITREALMS Media Group, Mr. Remmy Nweke; Head, Online Media, Public Affairs Department, Nigerian Communications Commission, Dr. Omoniyi Ibietan who represented EVC Danbatta at the event; Teach/Admin Officer, E-Waste Producer Responsibility Organisation Nigeria (E-PRON), Ms. Mofesayo Oyedeji and Executive Director, DigitalSENSE Africa, Mrs. Nkem Nweke, at the 2021 ITREALMS E-Waste Dialogue on “E-waste in Nigeria Consumer as a Key to Circular Economy and 20 years of GSM” in Lagos.

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has powers under Section 70 of the Nigerian Communications Act (NCA2003) to develop an E-waste Regulation for the telecommunications sector in the country.
This declaration was made by the Executive Vice Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of NCC, Prof. Umar Garba Danbatta in his keynote address at the 2021 ITREALMS E-Waste Dialogue in Lagos with the theme: E-Waste in Nigeria: Consumer as key to Circular Economy & 20 years of GSM.
Danbatta, represented by the Head of New Media, Dr. Ominiyi Ibietan, said that as at March 5, 2019, based on the Commission’s participatory rule-making procedure, came up with a draft of the E-waste Regulations and Disaster Recovery Guidelines which were hitherto published on its website for comments from the general public, especially telecommunications operators and other stakeholders.
“As required by law, a Public Inquiry on the E-waste Regulations and Disaster Recovery Guidelines was scheduled for March 5, 2019 and a Notice of the Public Inquiry was published in Daily Trust and New Telegraph Newspapers on Monday February 11, 2019,” he said.
The public inquiry, he also disclosed had over Sixty-one (61) persons representing telecommunications operators, interested stakeholders and the media in attendance, which offered him the opportunity to explain the importance of having a proper legal framework to regulate e-waste in the telecommunications sector.
“Considering that e-waste is the fastest growing waste stream in the world and a recent report by the World Economic Forum (WEF) estimated that this waste stream increased by about 48.5 million tonnes in 2018,” he said.
Prof. Danbatta defined e-waste as “electrical or electronic equipment that is waste, including all components, sub-assemblies and consumables that are part of the equipment at the time the equipment becomes waste.”
In addition, based on the WEF, over 75% of electronics imported into Nigeria were irreparable and toxic junk, which means that this menace remained rampant due to the low Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita/low income and the desperate quest for information by Nigerians.
The prevalence of e-waste, he said, raised a lot of pollution issues which should be managed, because of the resultant effects on humans and the environment.
Further, NCC, in line with its commitment to sustain phenomenal successes recorded in the sector in the past 20 years, also developed the ‘Disaster Recovery Guidelines’ to mitigate disasters that might affect business continuity in the industry and jeopardise the incredible success already recorded.
The Guidelines, Danbatta said, was introduced as part of the Commission’s wider risk management initiatives, aimed at protecting telecoms companies from the threat of emergencies in their operations.
The Commission, he equally said, in developing robust regulations and guidelines are to enhance development of the industry and the entire economy.
In giving general overview of NCC’s e-Waste regulations, Prof. Danbatta said it is made up of 31 regulations structured into Sixteen (16) parts.
Also included in the Regulations, he said, are one (1) Schedule, nine (9) Forms and four (4) Tables, stressing that the Regulations outlined the responsibilities and obligations of stakeholders in the e-waste value chain, such as the manufacturer, collection and disposal facilities agent, vendors, consumers or bulk consumers, recyclers, importers and transporters.
Notable, the EVC said, is that the Regulations applies to all type-approved Electrical and Electronic Equipment and activities carried out by any person in relation to Electrical and Electronic Equipment used in the telecommunication industry in Nigeria.
Meanwhile, NCC bagged the 2021 ITREALMS Telecom E-Waste Regulator Award in recognition of the Commission’s commitment in the regulation of Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) in Telecom Sector, according to the Executive Editor-in-Chief of ITREALMS Media, Mr. Remmy Nweke.
The award was received on behalf of the Commission by the Head of New Media, Dr. Ominiyi Ibietan, who represented the EVC and was presented by the National President, National Association of Telecom Subscribers (NATCOMS), Chief Deolu Ogunbanjo at the 2021 edition.

spot_img
spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Stanbic IBTC Bank PMI: Business Activity Continues to Rise, But Higher Fuel Costs Limit Growth

The Nigerian private sector remained in growth territory at...

Niger Delta Economic & Investment Summit 2026: Fubara, Stakeholders Discuss Strategies in PH

The Executive Governor of Rivers State, Sir Sim Fubara...

NGX Shareholders Commend Leadership at 65th AGM, Seeks Continued Growth

Shareholders of Nigerian Exchange Group Plc (NGX Group) have...

Sovereign Trust Insurance Set for Market Leadership via N5bn Rights Issue

Sovereign Trust Insurance Plc has completed the structuring phase...

All Set for Ecobank 2026 National Schools’ Team Chess Championship

L–R: Austen Osokpor, Head, Marketing and Corporate Communications, Ecobank...

Topics

PenCom’s Micro Pension Initiative Suffers Setback

There are indications that the micro pension initiative by...

Security of Data/Systems Top IT Priority in Africa, ME

Ensuring high levels of security of data and systems,...

NIGERIA in 2017: Experts Project Roadmap for Growth

The NIGERIA in 2017 Special Report is designed to...

FEMONOMICS & WENOMOMICS: Why Women are Driving Rethinking of the Sales Model (1)

When you recognise that women are not just the majority but actually the vast majority of consumers, and that their power is only going to increase, it completely changes the commercial urgency of getting to grips with women buyers. It’s extraordinary isn’t it how so much has been made of the emergence of China and India and of the impact of new technology on the world’s economic wellbeing – and yet a factor bigger than either of these dynamics has been comparatively ignored.

Intercontinental Bank Plc: Death so Painful

The banking entity was officially proclaimed DEAD by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in 2009. It was a mysterious and painful demise. But the soul of the bank has refused to Rest-in-Peace. Today, the living dead skeleton of the bank are rumbling in the belly of Access Bank Plc, fueling ghostly imaginations of resurrection or reincarnation. The Early Years Intercontinental Bank Plc was born in 1989 to the family of Dr. Erastus Akingbola. Early in life, the young bank exhibited elements of excellence, profitability and leadership in the banking sector. And when the whistle was blown on Banking Consolidation in 2005, the bank merged seamlessly with three other banking institutions: Equity Bank of Nigeria, Gateway Bank and Global Bank in October of that year. Naturally, the merging process made it bigger in terms of size, branch network, customer base and profitability.

BPE Earns Kudos from Ondo Gov for Privatisation Drive

Ondo State Governor, Arakunrin Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, has commended the Bureau...

BCG Embarks on Beach Clean Up to Mark World Health Day 2022

L-R: Oumar Toure, Project Leader, BCG Nigeria; Tolu Oyekan,...

Broadband Commission: Demand-creation Programs to Stimulate ICT Adoption

The Broadband Commission for Sustainable Development's Working Group on...
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img