Tuesday February 10, 2026
www.thenewsdesk.ng
For years, Nigeria’s Internet traffic has flowed largely through one door in Lagos. Airtel now wants to open another, and this time, from the South.
The telco says it plans to launch a second Internet breakout point from southern Nigeria, using the 2Africa submarine cable with traffic routed from Kwa Ibo in Akwa Ibom State.
Airtel Nigeria CEO Dinesh Balsingh shared the update during a media roundtable in Lagos, calling it a major step towards improving speed, resilience, and redundancy across the country.
What this means is simple: Nigeria will no longer be overly dependent on a single Internet gateway. With a southern breakout, large parts of the North and South will get a faster, alternative route for data traffic, while the entire ecosystem benefits from fewer outages and better reliability when something goes wrong in Lagos.
This matters because Internet disruptions don’t just slow Netflix; they affect banks, startups, government services, and millions of daily online transactions. As data consumption keeps rising, having multiple breakout points is becoming less of a “nice-to-have” and more of a national necessity.
Airtel says the move is backed by years of heavy investment in fibre and network upgrades. Its fibre backbone now reaches almost all states, site numbers are up over 15%, nearly all locations deliver 4G speeds, and 5G rollout is accelerating, though coverage is still patchy.
In short, the infrastructure race is heating up, and Airtel is betting that long-term planning, not quick wins, will define who leads Nigeria’s data future.
