[kictanet] Open Access Network Models Coming of Age?

Suhayl Esmailjee suhayl at esmailjee.com
Thu Aug 25 21:56:29 EAT 2011


Wholesale mobile broadband network for SA?

  Jan Vermeulen <http://mybroadband.co.za/news/author/jan-vermeulen> August
24, 2011 No comments<http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/32424-wholesale-mobile-broadband-network-for-sa.html#comments-box>

The current model for rolling out mobile broadband in South Africa is
inefficient, argues industry players

South Africa’s mobile network operators,
8ta<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/276092-8ta>,
Cell C <http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/213919-Cell-C>,
MTN<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/226943-MTN>,
and Vodacom <http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/227063-Vodacom>, all
build and run their own networks.

This involves not only putting up towers in strategic locations (which in
itself can be difficult task), but also linking up those towers to a core
network.

Before you can do anything with a cellular tower however, you need to get a
license to use radio frequency (RF) spectrum in particular frequency bands.

In South Africa, operators like 8ta, Cell C, MTN, and Vodacom all have such
licenses to operate their networks, but industry players are saying this
isn’t always the way to most effectively make use of spectrum, especially in
the lower frequency bands.
Open access radio network

Earlier this year (2011), Vodacom CEO Pieter
Uys<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/210077-Pieter-Uys>told
MyBroadband that instead of operators battling it out for a slice of
scarce spectrum, a single
network<http://mybroadband.co.za/news/wireless/20324-open-access-radio-network-for-south-africa.html>should
be built to maximise the value of this resource.

This is especially needed in the part of the RF spectrum known as the “digital
dividend<http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadcasting/17725-digital-tv-standards-battle-ends-logic-prevails.html>”
– lower frequency spectrum set to become available when South Africa
completes its migration from analogue to digital TV broadcasting.
[image: Pieter Uys]<http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/32424-wholesale-mobile-broadband-network-for-sa.html/attachment/pieter-uys-2>

Pieter Uys

Uys said that all stakeholders, including SA government, IT companies and
network operators should work together to get South Africa connected and a
single open access network is a sensible way to go about doing so.
Wholesale mobile broadband network an attractive option

Zoltan Miklos<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/322353-Zoltan-Miklos>,
executive of converged data networks at
Telkom<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/227037-Telkom>Mobile,
suggested that a possible scenario for future mobile spectrum
allocation is a wholesale model.

This would allow providers to buy wholesale services from a mobile operator
provider rather than licensing their own spectrum and building their own
network including towers. Such a model would need to serve the interest of
providing national broadband coverage at competitive prices, Miklos said.
[image: Zoltan Miklos]<http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/32424-wholesale-mobile-broadband-network-for-sa.html/attachment/zoltan-miklos-600>

Zoltan Miklos

Miklos said that mobile operators are grappling with providing mobile data
at prices that recover the significant capital and operational investment of
rolling out their own network. One could argue such models would make more
efficient use of spectrum and resources, Miklos said.

Director-general of the Department of Communications (DoC), Rosey
Sekese<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/337821-Rosey-Sekese>,
said that a wholesale model for spectrum is under discussion at the DoC and
that they see it as a very attractive option.

Sekese said that part of the issue is that incumbent operators with licenses
for spectrum want more, but as private businesses they will want to roll out
in the most profitable areas first. Typically these areas are found in more
urban South Africa.

A wholesale model that offers operators spectrum in urban and rural areas
could help address this issue.

Uys previously said that the lower frequency digital dividend spectrum is
particularly suitable to cover rural areas, and as it is hardly profitable
for operators to roll out data networks in these areas, a combined effort
will make the most sense to operators and South Africa as a whole.
Neutral operators the beginning?

American Tower Corporation
(ATC)<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/360534-American-Tower-Corporation-(ATC)>,
a wireless and broadcast telecommunications provider, bought Cell C’s tower
infrastructure in 2010 with the aim to offer a “network and service provider
agnostic approach” to pave the way “for a more open and competitive market.”

According to ATC, they offer an infrastructure sharing model, or
Infrastructure as a Services (IaaS) which gives everyone access to the same
level and type of geographic coverage.

“Infrastructure sharing or, to be more specific in our case, tower sharing,
is nothing new,” explained CEO of ATC South Africa, Pieter
Nel<http://mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php/229877-Pieter-Nel>
.

“It has been happening in some form in South Africa for some time now, but
we are the first independent, pro-competition service provider to adopt this
network agnostic model, which has been steadily gaining popularity in other
countries around the world due to the numerous benefits.”

According to Nel, the trick to getting this model right is ATC South
Africa’s ability to acquire or build out network infrastructure and manage
and maintain it in a manner that works out cheaper for MNOs than
self-provisioning the same capabilities would.

ATC said that they already boast most of the major mobile network operators
as clients and are currently in talks with “most of the current and future
broadband solution providers.”

http://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/32424-wholesale-mobile-broadband-network-for-sa.html
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