NCC Inaugurates Nigeria IPv6 Council to Boost Digital Infrastructure

Cynthia Okere, Lagos

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The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) has inaugurated the Nigeria IPv6 Council to accelerate the country’s transition to next-generation internet infrastructure.

In his inaugural address, the Executive Vice Chairman/CEO of the NCC, Dr Aminu Maida, described the move as a major milestone in Nigeria’s digital evolution and a signal of readiness to compete in the global internet space.

The Council, the national chapter of the IPv6 Forum, was established to drive awareness, coordination, and deployment of IPv6.

However, adoption remains low, with 2026 data from the Asia-Pacific Network Information Centre (APNIC) putting Nigeria at about 5 percent, far behind leading economies at over 40 percent.

Maida said the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses and the rise of technologies such as 5G, IoT, cloud computing, and AI make IPv6 adoption critical for national security, innovation, and economic growth.

He added that progress will depend on collaboration among government, operators, academia, and the private sector.

The NCC, he said, has already laid groundwork through partnerships, including a Memorandum of Understanding with African Network Information Centre (AFRINIC), aimed at building technical capacity across both public and private sectors.

According to him, the newly inaugurated council is expected to drive the implementation of a National IPv6 Deployment Strategy, which includes a target to significantly increase Nigeria’s adoption rate within the next three years.

The Council will also lead public awareness campaigns and strengthen Nigeria’s collaboration with international partners to align with global best practices.

Maida urged stakeholders to prioritise IPv6 deployment across their networks and platforms, stressing that investments made today will shape Nigeria’s digital competitiveness in the future.

The NCC boss expressed confidence that the council’s work will help deliver a more secure, connected, and globally competitive digital ecosystem for the country.

The chairman of the Nigeria IPv6 Council, Muhammed Rudman, stated that the exhaustion of IPv4 addresses remained a critical limitation for the growth of IoT, 5G, and AI, making migration to IPv6 urgent.

According to him, relying on IPv4 with Network Address Translation (NAT) hampers security, performance, and innovation.

Rudman encouraged providers to transition to avoid falling behind in the global digital economy.

Highlights of the event were the media chat with the EVC and the questions and answers session.

 

 

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