Mobile internet connectivity brings a wide range of social and economic benefits by helping to promote digital inclusion and supporting the delivery of essential services and key development objectives such as poverty eradication, healthcare, education, financial services and gender equality.
However, there is a large digital divide in Ghana and Uganda due to the challenge of bringing mobile internet coverage to rural areas in a commercially sustainable manner. According to GSMA’s research, achieving commercially sustainable connectivity requires:
Balancing the supply and demand equilibrium requires improved planning methodologies, innovative and less expensive technical solutions, as well as collaborative implementation models to support adoption of digital services.
The GSMA has launched its Connected Society Innovation Fund for Rural Connectivity to support innovative new technology solutions for connecting unserved rural communities in Ghana and Uganda.
Apply now for £900,000 in grant funding to test innovative ways to deploy mobile broadband networks in rural areas and demonstrate commercially sustainable models that can be scaled and replicated in similar environments.
Sign up now to get more project funding opportunities!
Applicants will be required to propose innovative commercially sustainable and scalable mobile internet coverage solutions in preselected rural areas. These solutions will be interconnected with the core network of one of the partner mobile network operators working with the GSMA.
Successful grantees and their partner MNO will also receive advisory support from the GSMA, which includes analytical support to identify commercially viable sites for deployment, and full technical and commercial performance reports.
GSMA aims to support commercially sustainable and scalable connectivity solutions with grant funding up £300,000 for each project that is innovative in at least one, and ideally as many as possible, of the following areas:
Radio access network
Power
Backhaul network
Rural passive infrastructure
Business model
GSMA anticipates that solutions receiving grant funding will likely involve consortia of different providers, which may include: individual vendors, satellite operators, integrators, start-ups, academic institutions and others.
The primary applicant must agree to the grant funding term sheet and meet the following eligibility criteria:
If you qualify, you should apply now for up to £300,000 in grant funding for your rural connectivity innovation and sign up now to get more project funding opportunities!
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