+86-156-2511-0166[email protected]WhatsApp
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUT
PRODUCTS
All products
APPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
Hanheng Refractory
HOMEABOUTAPPLICATIONS & INDUSTRIESMARKET SUPPORTNEWS
DISCUSS
+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp[email protected]
Hanheng RefractoryHanheng RefractoryBuilt for heat. Proven in delivery.

Hanheng Refractory Materials Co., Ltd. supplies shaped bricks, monolithic refractories, tundish materials, and insulation products for steel, ferroalloy, glass, boiler, and other heat-intensive operations.

Quick links

  • Home
  • About
  • Products
  • Applications & Industries
  • Market Support
  • News

Core products

  • Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Alumina-Magnesia-Carbon Brick
  • Magnesia-Alumina-Carbon Brick
  • Al2O3-SiC-C Brick
  • Calcium-Magnesium-Carbon Brick

Contact

Panpan Road, Zhanqian District, Yingkou, Liaoning, Chinawww.hanhengref.com[email protected]+86-156-2511-0166WhatsApp

© 2026 Hanheng Refractory

Project discussionProduct systemPrivacy Policy
Industry update
Published April 18, 2026businessconsumer_protectioneconomy

FCCPC denies banning airtime borrowing

The FCCPC clarifies it has not banned airtime borrowing services. It states recent disruptions are due to operators' non-compliance with regulations.

Source-backed market reading focused on the local industrial developments, project signals, and operating consequences that are actually worth tracking.

Read Article
Previous article

The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) has dismissed claims that it banned airtime borrowing and data advance services in Nigeria, describing the reports as false and misleading. The commission clarified that it did not issue any directive stopping telecom operators from offering such services, stressing that Nigerians remain free to access lawful value-added telecom offerings.

“The commission has not prohibited airtime borrowing or data advance services, and no directive was issued preventing consumers from accessing lawful telecom value-added services,” the statement read. The FCCPC explained that the regulatory framework was introduced following a surge in consumer complaints, including opaque charges, unexplained deductions, poor disclosure standards, and aggressive recovery practices in the digital lending space.

According to the commission, the regulations were designed to sanitise the market and ensure fairness by mandating transparency, proper registration, and accountability among service providers. It added that the framework also seeks to strengthen consumer protection by ensuring clear disclosure of fees and terms, accessible complaint channels, and safeguards for user data.

The agency revealed that some telecom operators had also engaged in anti-competitive practices, including exclusionary arrangements with third-party providers, in violation of existing laws. Related News Kano trains health workers in bio-risk, disease surveillance TikToker, bread company at war over ‘everlasting’ loaf Petrol prices to crash as Strait of Hormuz reopens Despite granting operators an initial 90-day compliance window and extending the deadline to January 5, 2026, the commission said several companies failed to meet the requirements.

It noted that any temporary suspension of airtime borrowing or data advance services should be seen as a business decision by affected operators rather than a regulatory ban. “Any temporary suspension, restriction, or operational change introduced by service providers should therefore be understood as a business or compliance decision by those operators, not a ban imposed by the FCCPC,” the statement added.

The commission also accused certain vested interests of spreading misinformation to undermine regulatory reforms aimed at protecting consumers and promoting fair competition. Describing such narratives as “mischievous,” the FCCPC urged Nigerians to disregard unverified claims and rely on official sources of information.

The FCCPC maintained that its intervention aligns with broader efforts by the Federal Government to regulate digital lending and protect consumers in Nigeria’s growing telecom and fintech ecosystem. The commission reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring transparency, accountability, and responsible innovation, noting that compliance with regulatory standards remains mandatory for all operators.

However, in a statement on Friday, the commission attributed recent disruptions in the services to non-compliance by some telecom operators with its Consumer Lending Regulations introduced in July 2025. “The commission has not prohibited airtime borrowing or data advance services, and no directive was issued preventing consumers from accessing lawful telecom value-added services,” the statement read.

The FCCPC explained that the regulatory framework was introduced following a surge in consumer complaints, including opaque charges, unexplained deductions, poor disclosure standards, and aggressive recovery practices in the digital lending space. According to the commission, the regulations were designed to sanitise the market and ensure fairness by mandating transparency, proper registration, and accountability among service providers.

It added that the framework also seeks to strengthen consumer protection by ensuring clear disclosure of fees and terms, accessible complaint channels, and safeguards for user data. The agency revealed that some telecom operators had also engaged in anti-competitive practices, including exclusionary arrangements with third-party providers, in violation of existing laws.

Next article

Sources and reading line

Public reports, policy documents, and industry releases cited in this article remain available here for continued review.

View cited sources1 sources

FCCPC denies banning airtime borrowing

Published source

Document: Punch Nigeria Business RSS · Source: Punch Nigeria Business RSS

Open source↗
Continue from here

Continue this article into market review, product systems, and project preparation.

When this signal is already affecting your buying sequence, continue from here into the related market page, product route, or a practical project discussion.

Related market pages

Continue into the country page when destination documents, packing, and delivery timing need a deeper read.

Nigeria industry and refractory demandOpen market page
Project preparation

Share the unit, duty position, target campaign, destination market, and document questions so the next reply can stay practical.

Unit name, exact hot-zone position, and current lining route

Target campaign, shutdown or commissioning window, and expected quantity split

Destination market, delivery route, and the document set needed before quotation

Discuss this articleBack to News