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BMA’s View: Nigeria’s Digital Switchover: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly

June 9, 2026
Reading Time: 5 mins read
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Nigeria’s digital switchover has received mixed reviews, highlighting progress, unresolved issues, and underlying conflicts over financial interests in broadcasting. The countdown to 17 June is on. Before the ribbon is cut, Nigeria’s broadcasting industry owes itself one honest conversation — because all three of these stories are true at the same time.

After the better part of two decades and a reported ₦60 billion, Nigeria has finally fixed a date. On 17 June 2026, the National Broadcasting Commission and NigComSat will switch on a satellite-led “FreeTV” platform, with analogue’s final lights-out pencilled in for 31 December 2028. 

The Broadcasting Organisations of Nigeria (BON) say it is not a real switchover at all. The regulator says its critics are defending a failed status quo. Both, inconveniently, have a point.

Here at Broadcast Media Africa, we have watched too many African switchover deadlines come and go to be dazzled by a launch date — or to dismiss one. So let us do what the press conferences won’t: separate what deserves applause from what deserves scrutiny, and from what should genuinely keep ministers awake at night.

The Good

Movement, at last. Nigeria has been “switching over” since before some of today’s content directors had their first jobs. Eight states reached by digital terrestrial signal after seventeen years and tens of billions of naira are not a programme — they are an indictment. Whatever else one says about the Big Picture strategy, it has broken the inertia that was killing the sector.

The instinct behind a satellite-first model is also, on the engineering, sound. Terrestrial-only delivery was never going to reach rural Nigeria at a price anyone could defend. Hybrid is not heresy — the UK runs Freeview alongside Freesat, Australia leans on satellite for its remote interior, and Morocco has carried the bulk of its transition over the dish. A country the size and shape of Nigeria insisting on towers alone, in 2026, would be choosing the most expensive route to the smallest audience.

Then there are the structural prizes. An open platform with no encryption, accepting any compliant decoder, would break the stranglehold of proprietary set-top boxes that have quietly taxed Nigerian viewers for years. The promised GARB audience-measurement system addresses the single most corrosive weakness in the market: for two decades broadcasters could not prove their reach, and advertisers paid them accordingly. Crack measurement, and the talked-about ₦605 billion advertising market stops being a slide and starts being a cheque. Eighteen months of free carriage for broadcasters holding to 60 per cent local content, plus regional studios and indigenous-language commissioning, is the kind of cultural dividend the original White Paper only dreamed about.

If the strategy delivered only this, it would deserve the ribbon-cutting. The trouble is what sits beneath it.

The Bad

Start with the word everyone is fighting over. A switchover earns its name by switching analogue off and handing back the 700/800 MHz spectrum — the so-called digital dividend, the very thing valued at upwards of a billion dollars. Aggregating channels onto a satellite does not, by itself, release a single megahertz of terrestrial spectrum. So the headline economic windfall the NBC keeps invoking is tied to a terrestrial switch-off plan that the satellite launch, on its own, does not deliver. You cannot bank the dividend and skip the switch-off.

Then the sequencing. A national platform launches on 17 June, and the “national stakeholders’ meeting” is scheduled for thirty days after. That is not consultation; that is ratification with the engine already running. When the industry’s own umbrella body and the set-top-box manufacturers are both waving the same 2012 White Paper and reaching opposite conclusions to the regulator, the document is plainly ambiguous enough to end up in court — and at least one case already has not gone away. Launching into unresolved legal ambiguity is how you turn a deadline into a lawsuit.

And there is a quiet single point of failure at the heart of all this. NigComSat’s current satellite is itself due for replacement in 2028 — the very year of analogue switch-off. Hanging a nation’s free-to-air television on one ageing spacecraft, however reassuring the contingency briefings, is a question of resilience that deserves a straight answer, not a soothing one.

The Ugly

Here is the part nobody at the podium wants to say out loud.

Strip away the treaty citations, and the talk of convergence, and a great deal of this fight is about rent. Box manufacturers, signal distributors and the cottage industry that has fed on two decades of pilot phases and fragmented rollouts all have something to lose from an open satellite platform — and the regulator, for its part, has every incentive to brand its own initiative a triumph. Principle is doing a lot of heavy lifting for interest on every side of this table. Read the press releases with that in mind.

The genuinely ugly scenario, though, is governance. The regulator that licenses, polices, and adjudicates Nigerian broadcasting is now also building, branding, and curating the platform through which 100 channels reach the living room. Calling it a “market facilitator” does not resolve the conflict; it dresses it up. And the timing should sober everyone: a state-shaped gateway into the nation’s screens, with the regulator deciding who is carried and who is not, consolidating its grip in the eighteen months before a 2027 general election. We are not alleging intent. We are pointing at a structure — and structures, not intentions, are what outlast governments.

Worst of all is the outcome no one is planning for, but everyone should fear: that Nigeria ends up with neither. Not a true terrestrial switchover, so no spectrum dividend and no billion dollars. And a fragile, single-satellite platform that wobbles the moment the hardware ages. Two decades, ₦60 billion, and a can kicked one more time — only now with a launch party attached.

Smell the coffee

None of this argues for another seventeen years of paralysis. It argues for a fortnight of honesty.

Decouple the wins from the risks. The open platform, the end of encryption, GARB measurement and the local-content push are worth having — keep them. But publish the actual terrestrial switch-off and spectrum-release plan, because without it the word “switchover” is marketing. Hold the stakeholder roundtable before 17 June, not after, and gazette whatever roadmap emerges so it has the force of law rather than the lifespan of a press release. Put the regulator’s platform role at arm’s length from its regulatory one, with governance the public can inspect. And give Nigerians one honest number for what reaching FreeTV will cost a household, dish and all.

Get that right, and Nigeria could finally have the switchover it has paid for many times over. Get it wrong, and 17 June becomes one more anniversary the industry would rather forget.

The coffee is on the table. It is time the whole ecosystem sat up and smelled it.

BMA’s View is the editorial opinion of Broadcast Media Africa.

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