Ghana Cabinet approves $82m Digital Migration Contract
Cabinet on Thursday approved a $82.4-million Digital Migration Contract, to be executed by a wholly-owned Ghanaian company, K-NET Limited.
The migration to digital terrestrial television (DTT) will guarantee multiple TV channels, clearer pictures, better sound quality and offer more opportunities for advertisers and broadcasters.
A press statement from the Flagstaff House Communication Bureau and copied to the Ghana News Agency, said K-NET was expected to complete the entire migration process in nine months, with the project divided into three phases.
Cabinet, at a previous sitting, approved the auctioning of spectrums to be freed from the migration to pay for the cost of the digital migration.
According to the statement, KNET’s $82.4-million contract is $13 million cheaper than the $95 million StarTimes contract, which was terminated for non-performance.
Founded in 1996, K-NET is a wholly Ghanaian-owned telecoms infrastructure company,providing world-class telecoms services comparable to international best standards.
The statement said “with a 100 per cent network coverage in Ghana and footprints across sub-Saharan Africa, the Ghanaian company is also the major provider of connectivity services to over 50 radio stations and 30 TV channels in Ghana.”
It added that K-NET owned the biggest ISP infrastructure supporting Digital Terrestrial Television (DTT), Direct -to-Home TV (DTH) and Telecoms.
Source: GNA