•
material site security issues;
•
significant license or permit surcharges;
•
increases in the cost of labor (as a result of unionization or otherwise);
•
seizure, nationalization or expropriation of property or equipment;
•
repudiation, nullification, modification or renegotiation of contracts;
•
limitations on insurance coverage, such as political risk or war risk coverage, in certain areas;
•
political or social unrest, such as tensions between the “Anglophone” and “Francophone” regions of Cameroon;
•
local, foreign and/or U.S. monetary policy and foreign currency fluctuations and devaluations;
•
changes in foreign currency exchange rates;
•
price setting or other similar laws for the sharing of passive telecommunications infrastructure, or requirements to construct new sites in remote or rural areas that are less commercially viable for us;
•
complications associated with repairing and replacing equipment in remote locations, or supply chain issues arising out of global or geopolitical issues, such as operational and transport restrictions as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic;
•
import-export quotas, wage and price controls, imposition of trade barriers;
•
U.S. and foreign sanctions, trade embargoes or export control restrictions;
•
restrictions on the transfer of funds into or out of countries in which we operate, or lack of availability of foreign currency;
•
failure to comply with U.S. Treasury and other internationally recognized sanctions regulations restricting doing business with certain nations or specially designated nationals;
•
failure to comply with anti-bribery, anti-corruption laws or money laundering and regulations such as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, the UK Bribery Act or similar international or local anti-bribery, anti-corruption laws or money laundering, or Office of Foreign Assets Control requirements;
•
uncertain rulings or results from legal or judicial systems, including inconsistencies between and within laws, regulations and decrees, and judicial application thereof, which may be enforced retroactively, and delays in the judicial process;
•
actions, proceedings, claims, disputes and threats brought by governments, regulators, entities or individuals for fees, taxes or other payments, even if meritless or frivolous under applicable law;
•
regulatory or financial requirements to comply with bureaucratic actions;
•
changes to existing laws or new laws, and/or changing labor and taxation laws or policies, including confiscatory taxation;
•
other forms of government regulation and economic conditions that are beyond our control; and
•
governmental corruption.
Any of these or other risks could adversely impact our customers’ and/or our operations, which, in turn, could have a material adverse effect on our business, prospects, financial condition and/or results of operations, as well as our growth opportunities. In particular, a significant portion of our revenues are currently derived from our Nigerian operations (73% of our revenues for the six months ended June 30, 2021), and any such risks materializing within Nigeria in particular may have a significant impact on our business as a whole, including our business, prospects, financial condition and/or results of operations.
Operations in international markets, including emerging and less developed markets (including Africa, the Middle East and Latin America), also subject us to numerous additional and different laws