• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Monday, September 1, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

DSO: Nigeria Must Embrace A Digital Future

by Tajuddeen Adepetu
5 months ago
in Opinion
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

In 2006, Nigeria joined the global mandate led by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) to migrate from analogue to digital terrestrial broadcasting. The goal was clear: improve broadcast quality, free up spectrum, enable more channels, and unlock economic opportunities across the creative and tech industries.

Advertisement

By 2015, the Nigerian government approved a White Paper to guide the Digital Switch Over (DSO), with the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) leading implementation. But what was meant to be a bold leap forward has since stalled—crippled by bureaucracy, outdated policy, resistance from entrenched interests, and a lack of political will.

Now, nearly two decades after that global mandate, Nigeria is still stuck in limbo—while other countries have fully embraced the digital broadcasting era. This isn’t just embarrassing. It’s economically dangerous. It’s time for a hard reset. The DSO must move forward—not on nostalgia, but on today’s realities and tomorrow’s possibilities.

 

Time to stop the stalemate and move forward

RELATED

Nigerian-inspired Power Meals For Strength, Muscle Recovery

The Nutrition Trap: Eating More But Nourishing Less

14 hours ago
2023: Kumuyi Cautions Politicians On Religious-based Tickets

Christlike Love In A Godly Family

14 hours ago
ADVERTISEMENT

Let’s be honest—Nigeria’s Digital Switch Over (DSO) project was meant to be a game-changer. It had the potential to transform our broadcast sector, boost content distribution, create new jobs, and elevate the viewer experience. But that dream has stalled. Why? We’re trying to build the future using the tools—and thinking—of the past.

It’s 2025. We can’t run a marathon with shackles from 2015.

The rules are outdated, the game has changed

ADVERTISEMENT

The DSO was guided by a White Paper written in 2015. That’s almost a lifetime ago in tech years. The world has moved. Back then, DTT (Digital Terrestrial Television) was the star. Today, it’s DTH, OTT, streaming, and hybrid systems.

We’re now living in an era where your mobile phone is your TV, your radio, and your cinema—rolled into one. Yet Nigeria’s policy framework is still wired to old specs—forcing us to use outdated Set-Top Boxes, sidelining broadband integration, and ignoring global best practices. This is more than inefficient—it’s self-sabotage.

If we don’t update our policies now, we risk building a digital infrastructure that’s obsolete before it’s even live. Millions of dollars will go down the drain. Creators and broadcasters will be stuck in tech that can’t compete. The global content economy will leave us behind.Why should we be held hostage by outdated decisions when new opportunities are knocking?

 

Let the NBC do its job

The National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) is the body legally charged with steering this transition. So let them steer. Give them the power to modernize policy. Let them engage meaningfully with stakeholders. Shield them from bureaucratic drama and political landmines.The NBC is not the enemy. Obstructing it doesn’t protect progress—it kills it.

Some are resisting the new DSO path because of old investments. That’s understandable—but it’s not sustainable. Legacy systems should never outweigh national growth. We need fresh strategies, not stale grudges. We need stakeholders who build, not bicker.

Here’s the truth: The DTT-only boxes being pushed are outdated. They’re limiting. They cut users off from richer, smarter content experiences. Today’s consumer wants flexibility—TV, internet, streaming, all in one device. Anything less is a disservice to both audience and industry. We need hybrid STBs that reflect current tech realities. Anything else is a dead end.

 

What needs to happen—now

Rip up the 2015 playbook. It’s done. It no longer fits the world we live in. Update the White Paper and align with today’s digital ecosystem. Back the NBC—fully. Stop the noise. Give them the room and support to lead effectively.

Think forward, not backward. This is about future growth—not preserving outdated systems. End the sabotage. We can’t keep slowing down the train over old battles. Progress doesn’t wait. Talk like builders, not gatekeepers. Every stakeholder must commit to solutions, not gridlocks.

 

Final word

This is not just a switch from analog to digital—it’s a test of Nigeria’s readiness to embrace the future. And right now, we’re flunking that test. We don’t need another delay. We need bold leadership, policy courage, and a unified industry mindset. The NBC’s direction is right. They deserve our full support.

Let’s stop dragging our feet. Let’s stop arguing over yesterday’s hardware. Let’s build a digital broadcast system that actually works -for now and for the future. Nigeria is home to Africa’s most influential creative – filmmakers, musicians, content producers, and digital storytellers who shape global pop culture and drive billion-dollar industries.

From Nollywood to Afrobeats, Nigerian talent is setting the pace. Yet, the outdated handling of the Digital Switch Over is a disservice to this ecosystem. By clinging to obsolete policies and technologies, we’re choking distribution channels, limiting access to local content, and blocking the full monetization potential of creative work.

In a country bursting with world-class talent, failing to provide a modern broadcast infrastructure isn’t just shortsighted – it’s sabotage. Nigeria deserves better. And the time to act is now.

 

–Adepetu is a broadcaster and media-tech entrepreneur

 

 


Join Our WhatsApp Channel



Tags: Digital Economy
SendShare10172Tweet6358Share
ADVERTISEMENT
Previous Post

Yoruba Language Expert Calls For Women-Led Clubs To Preserve Culture

Next Post

Dan Bello And The Implications Of His Diatribe On Islamic Preachers

Tajuddeen Adepetu

Tajuddeen Adepetu

You May Like

Nigerian-inspired Power Meals For Strength, Muscle Recovery
Columns

The Nutrition Trap: Eating More But Nourishing Less

2025/08/31
2023: Kumuyi Cautions Politicians On Religious-based Tickets
Religion

Christlike Love In A Godly Family

2025/08/31
Your Breakthroughs And Your Words
Religion

Visible Out Of The Invisible

2025/08/31
UK Firm To Execute $500m Energy Infrastructure Projects In Katsina
Columns

Not So Fast, Dikko Radda

2025/08/31
FEC Holds Buhari Tribute Session Today
Columns

Small Victories, Big Goals: NEC’s $1 Trillion Plan

2025/08/31
North-on-North Violence
Backpage

North-on-North Violence

2025/08/31
Leadership Conference advertisement

LATEST

Tinubu Has Plunged 30m More Nigerians Into Poverty, He Will Lose 2027 Poll — El-Rufai

Federal Gov’t Now Kisses Bandits, Gives Them Billions — El-Rufai

‘Myself, Peter Obi Were Given Forebearance In ADC Coalition,’ El-Rufai Clarifies Party Membership

Thugs Who Attacked ADC Meeting In Kaduna Were Gov’t-Sponsored, Covered By Police – El-Rufai

Dangote Group Mourns Death Of Phyna’s Sister Ruth Otabor

Reject Rivers LG Polls Conducted By ‘Occupation Govt’, Atiku Tells Opposition

Szoboszlai Scores Stunner As Liverpool Beat Arsenal 1-0

Tinubu Fair To All Sections Of Nigeria — Minister

Police Arrest Man For Alleged Killing Of 5-yr-old Boy In Adamawa

Martinez Missing In Villa Squad Amid Man Utd Interest

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
  • Columns
  • Football
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.