
Chad has set out to rewrite its digital destiny, unveiling a US $1.5 billion programme—“Tchad Connexion 2030”—that promises to triple internet penetration, wire the country with fresh fibre and satellite links, and open a telecom market long dominated by the state‑run operator Sotel. According to strategy documents released by the Ministry of Finance on 16 July, the investment is ring‑fenced inside Chad’s wider US $30 billion national development plan and backed by the World Bank and consulting firm Roland Berger. The headline goal is stark: lift broadband coverage from today’s 13.2 percent of citizens to 30 percent by 2030, an ambition that hinges on completing a 509‑kilometre fibre spur from N’Djamena to the Niger border, clearing rights of way for new routes north to Libya and Egypt, and stitching rural black‑spots together with low‑Earth‑orbit satellite gateways.
The blueprint goes beyond ducts and towers. It instructs the government to privatise Sotel, license a third mobile network operator, enforce number portability and hand a revitalised regulator new enforcement teeth—all moves designed to slash data prices and coax private capital into a market of roughly 18 million people. Every ministry must digitise core services, from tax filings to land records, while a nationwide push for cash‑lite payments will fold school fees, utility bills and farm subsidies into a single e‑wallet ecosystem. Officials say the reforms—plus Starlink’s recent commercial launch in Chad—will end the country’s digital isolation and put 70 percent of citizens within 10 kilometres of high‑speed access by the end of the decade.
Funding will blend a sovereign bond issue, concessional loans already in the World Bank pipeline, and public‑private partnerships that let fibre consortia earn regulated returns in exchange for open‑access wholesale pricing. The finance ministry projects average annual GDP growth of eight percent once the backbone is live, citing data from the Alliance for Affordable Internet that every ten‑point rise in broadband penetration adds at least one point to GDP in low‑income countries. Critics note the plan is silent on cybersecurity, even as Kaspersky logged more than 130 million African web attacks last year, but officials insist a dedicated cyber‑resilience bill will accompany the telecom‑sector overhaul before year‑end. If all milestones are met, Chad’s digital spend—less than one‑sixth of Nigeria’s broadband budget but deployed into a population barely a tenth the size—would create one of Africa’s fastest expansion curves in absolute connectivity terms. That prospect, plus an explicit pledge to keep public debt capped at 32 percent of GDP, helped the announcement land well with donors and investors lining up for a September roadshow in Abu Dhabi. From new fibre corridors and satellite uplinks to classroom tablets and e‑government kiosks, the $1.5 billion plan amounts to Chad’s boldest bet yet that bits and bytes can do what oil revenue alone never has: knit together a vast Sahelian republic and pull millions into the digital economy.
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