LAGOS, Nigeria – MTN Nigeria has boldly declared its Dabengwa Data Centre and cloud services as competitive alternatives to global hyperscalers like AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. But with Nigerians questioning MTN’s reliability in connectivity, can the telecom giant truly deliver a world-class cloud platform?
Key Features of MTN’s Dabengwa Data Centre
Tier III Certified: 99.982% uptime (45 mins max downtime/year)
Modular Design: 96 pre-fab units, scalable from 4.5MW to 20MW
Current Capacity: 780 server racks (thousands of virtual machines)
Self-Service Cloud: Developers can deploy apps without MTN’s intervention
Local Data Sovereignty: Keeps Nigerian data within borders
Lynda Saint-Nwafor (MTN Enterprise Chief):
“We’re not just hosting data—we’re securing Nigeria’s digital future. Our latency beats AWS in Nigeria.”
How It Stacks Up Against AWS
Feature | MTN Dabengwa (Lagos) | AWS (Cape Town) |
---|---|---|
Power Capacity | 4.5MW (scalable to 9MW) | ~20-30MW per zone |
Latency (Nigeria) | <10ms (local) | ~50-70ms |
Pricing | Naira-based | USD-based |
Uptime SLA | Not disclosed | 99.99% |
Developer Tools | Limited APIs | Extensive SDKs/docs |
MTN’s Edge: Lower latency, local currency billing, data sovereignty
AWS’s Lead: More mature infrastructure, global scalability
Why Nigerians Are Skeptical
MTN’s Mobile Network Woes:
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Patchy 5G/USSD services raise doubts about cloud reliability
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History of service downtimes (though cloud infra is more resilient)
Unanswered Questions:
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Exact uptime guarantees (AWS offers 99.99%)
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Pricing transparency (AWS’s costs are publicly documented)
Public Reaction on X (Twitter):
“First fix your network before dreaming of competing with AWS.” – @TechBroNaija
“Finally! No more $800M yearly cloud spending abroad.” – @StartupCEO
The Economic Upside
$800M Savings: Nigeria spends this annually on foreign cloud services
Jobs: Hundreds hired during construction, more in maintenance
Security: Protects sensitive data from foreign jurisdiction risks
Early Adopter: Abia State Government has already signed up.
Can MTN Really Compete?
Yes, for Nigerian businesses needing low-latency, cost-effective hosting
Not yet for global-scale enterprises (AWS still dominates in features)
Karl Toriola (MTN CEO):
“This is phase one. We’re scaling to hyperscaler levels.”
What’s Next?
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Q4 2025: Expansion to 9MW capacity
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More Nigerian clients: Banks, fintechs, and startups testing the platform
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Developer outreach: MTN must improve API/docs to attract tech talent
The Verdict
MTN’s Dabengwa is a major leap for African tech sovereignty, but winning over skeptics will require:
Proving reliability (no prolonged downtimes)
Transparent pricing (to undercut AWS)
Robust developer support (better than MTN’s customer service)