A Nigerian technology company, EMOSIM has unveiled a locally developed e-SIM solution to save the country millions of dollars in foreign exchange while boosting digital inclusion and pan-African connectivity.
The innovation, made possible by the regulatory foresight of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), was celebrated at EMOSIM official launch, in Lagos, on Wednesday, which brought together telecom stakeholders, business leaders, and government representatives.
Former executive vice chairman of the NCC, Prof. Umar Danbatta, during a firechat, traced the origins of the EMOSIM breakthrough to deliberate policy actions by the commission. “When I was still serving, one of our key goals was to optimize spectrum usage. We realised the need to introduce more players into the telecom space through Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs). EMOSIM stood out early on and has today become a model for how regulatory vision can drive impactful innovation,” he said.
Danbatta noted that EMOSIM’s emergence aligns with the NCC’s three universal service pillars: availability, accessibility, and affordability, the foundations of digital inclusion. “EMOSIM is delivering on these goals, offering borderless connectivity without the hassle of physical SIM cards,” he added.
Nigeria’s telecom liberalization journey from a mono-operator era dominated by NITEL to over 200 million active mobile subscribers today, has now entered a new phase, one characterised by digital autonomy and exportable innovation.
“This is the dividend of the Nigerian Communications Act of 2003/2004. The Act anticipated a future of dynamic service delivery and enabled the NCC to issue licenses that adapt with the times. EMOSIM proves that regulation backed by vision can yield real, life-changing innovation,” Danbatta stated.
Chairman and founder of EMOSIM, Jimmy Eboma, described the product as a game-changer for African travelers and businesses. “Connectivity is not a luxury; it is a lifeline. EMOSIM connects users seamlessly across 190 countries with over 600 networks. No SIM swaps. No hidden charges. Just instant access,” Eboma declared.
He credited the NCC’s open-minded regulatory environment and global partners such as Tata Communications for making the innovation possible. “With the right support, African innovators can lead the world. This isn’t just a product, it’s a declaration: Nigeria builds the future,” he affirmed.
As Nigeria’s MVNO ecosystem grows, licensees like EMOSIM are now required to show measurable impact by 2025 or risk license revocation. So far, EMOSIM is delivering on its mandate, proving that local solutions can rival and even surpass foreign alternatives. From affordable roaming and seamless connectivity to forex retention and digital sovereignty, EMOSIM represents more than a product launch, as it is a paradigm shift and it is a shift that puts Nigeria at the heart of Africa’s digital transformation.
“This is Africa’s time. Nigeria isn’t waiting for the future. We are building it one innovation at a time,” Eboma said.
CEO of Wakanow, Bayo Adedeji, underscored the economic significance of the local e-SIM, adding that until now, Nigerian businesses were forced to source e-SIMs from foreign vendors, a practice that bled foreign exchange from the economy. “Each time a Nigerian pays in naira, I pay in dollars to foreign e-SIM providers. That’s forex leakage we can now stop. With EMOSIM, we can serve over 1.5 million Nigerian travelers and keep that money circulating within our economy,” Adedeji said.
He also pointed to the export potential of EMOSIM, adding that, “This is a Nigerian solution we can scale across 28 African countries. That is not just about saving forex, it is about earning it.”
Director general of the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), Dr. Jobson Ewalefoh, hailed EMOSIM as a symbol of what local capacity and global collaboration can achieve.
“We need more homegrown tech solutions like this that reduce dependency and build sovereign capacity. Nigeria can lead if we remove the barriers to innovation and trust our own ideas,” he stated.
Ewalefoh emphasized the importance of investing in research, data, and digital infrastructure to scale such innovations. “Let this success challenge us to build the systems that will nurture more EMOSIMs across sectors,” he added.
Former president of the National Institute of Marketing of Nigeria, Tony Agenmonmen, highlighted the day-to-day frustrations Nigerian travelers face with roaming and foreign SIMs. “I have missed important calls and wasted money simply because activating roaming or understanding local SIM instructions was too complicated. This e-SIM solves a problem every Nigerian traveler knows too well. That it’s built in Nigeria, by Nigerians, gives us pride and confidence in our local tech industry,” he said.
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