[kictanet] LTE/4G and the state of broadband and Universal Access in Kenya

Walubengo J jwalu at yahoo.com
Tue Dec 9 12:48:51 EAT 2014


Adam good thoughts..especially 

****"If Safaricom can sell LTE to the 1% and that makes enough money to pay well for the spectrum license and GoK then uses that money for the USF to build 3G towers in rural areas - then that's really great".
But then again Safcom is not a charity organisation and may rather pay out the profits to the shareholders (like me :-) rather than build extra  3G towers to remote non economic zones in Kenya.
then
***"4G/LTE deployments aren't really that much more expensive than 3G as I understand it." 
I dont have the actual costs, but the fact is 4G/LTE base stations have a small footprint/radius compared to 3G, so you will require more base stations to cover larger areas/populations. More base stations more money hence the cost of service to the customer can only be higher.

*** The big difference is the 'cost' of the spectrum - which is whatever the market will bear. 
actually cost of spectrum will be decided/or has been decided by the Regulator. But the point is, even if it was given away for free, or through trading there is no guarantee that the benefit will not be translated to the consumer.
In summary, I guess my beef is not against the LTE technology( it is good, it is inevitable and it will be deployed).  My point is that it will not address the high cost of communication and is not likely to address the bigger picture (getting everyone online).  

And yes, that is not Safaricom's problem but the Regulators problem. 

walu.
      From: Adam Nelson <adam at varud.com>
 To: Walubengo J <jwalu at yahoo.com>; KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke> 
 Sent: Tuesday, December 9, 2014 12:14 PM
 Subject: Re: [kictanet] LTE/4G and the state of broadband and Universal Access in Kenya
   
Walu,
The best response to your article is in the comments:
"4G brings with it unique capabilities like VoLte with lean radio protocol stack...3G voice is only possible with forced 2G fall back..so we need 4G...one will not need 2 radio access types to obtain service...one lean 4G radio access is enough...the capex is also low given smaller equipment footprint..."
4G/LTE deployments aren't really that much more expensive than 3G as I understand it.  The big difference is the 'cost' of the spectrum - which is whatever the market will bear.  If Safaricom can sell LTE to the 1% and that makes enough money to pay well for the spectrum license and GoK then uses that money for the USF to build 3G towers in rural areas - then that's really great.
What would be better is a decoupling of the tower system from the providers and then there can be a single LTE network run by a utility that rents space in a well regulated way to the MNOs ... but even though Rwanda is doing that, I don't see Kenya following in that path.
-Adam
--Kili - Cloud for Africa: kili.io
Musings: twitter.com/varudMore Musings: varud.comAbout Adam: www.linkedin.com/in/adamcnelson
On Tue, Dec 9, 2014 at 12:05 PM, Walubengo J via kictanet <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:



Mwendwa,
It could have been easier to break down these important issues and perhaps allocate each 1-2days for feedback from Listers on each of the issues.
Otherwise my controversial LTE/4GE views are well captured here Despite low uptake of 3G internet, mobile companies want to roll out 4G

|   |
|   |  |   |   |   |   |   |
| Despite low uptake of 3G internet, mobile companies want...Sometimes we must ask ourselves a few questions about this technological rat-race |
|  |
| View on www.nation.co.ke | Preview by Yahoo |
|  |
|   |

As for the USF challenges, I had assumed all was well following the gazettement of the new board members in June this year to the Commission in charge but open to hear more.

walu.
     From: Mwendwa Kivuva via kictanet <kictanet at lists.kictanet.or.ke>
 To: jwalu at yahoo.com 
 Sent: Tuesday, December 9, 2014 9:44 AM
 Subject: [kictanet] LTE/4G and the state of broadband and Universal Access in Kenya
   
(Apologies for cross-posting)

Nothing is as great as high internet speed. That is the mantra on
Safaricom's 4G page (1). Safaricom's 4G/LTE service is the first of
its kind in the region and promises a browsing experience like never
before. Long Term Evolution  (LTE) is a standard for wireless
communication of high-speed data for mobile phones and data
terminals.(2)

To use LTE you need a 4G capable Device (phone/tablet/modem), Change
to a 4G enabled SIM card  and be in an area covered by the 4G service
i.e. Some parts of Nairobi and Mombasa.

With the rollout of 4G in some parts of Nairobi and Mombasa, we are
exploring the state of "real" broadband in Kenya, the cost to the
common citizen, and coverage. As we continue to privilege those of us
in urban areas, how are we catering for the interests and needs of the
marginalized?

TESPOK in August issued a statement (3) advising it's members not to
pay Universal Service Fund (4) until they meet with the Communications
Authority Director General and ICT cabinet Secretary to clearly define
the procedures and processes of administering the 0.5% of operators'
annual revenues. What is the current state of USF in Kenya? Is it
operational? Is the 0.5% sufficient to have any impact in society?

Are the USF Council members (5) representative of the Internet
community in Kenya? Are all stakeholders interests taken into
consideration in forming the council? Would these distinguished
citizens know the troubles the user in Kitui goes through when he has
to climb a flag-post to get network signal, or the parcel that arrives
in Lokitang after a month?

Internet Society Kenya Chapter and Kictanet seeks to engage in a
series of online discussions covering various trending issues which
will culminate in a public consultative forum with industry and
policymakers to share the feedback from the community and see how best
we can influence and shape the Internet landscape in Kenya.

Your valuable contribution is always appreciated.

Sincerely,
______________________
Mwendwa Kivuva, Nairobi, Kenya
Secretary, Internet Society Kenya.

NOTES
(1). http://www.safaricom.co.ke/personal/internet/safaricom-4g-lte
(2). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LTE_%28telecommunication%29
(3). http://www.tespok.co.ke/?p=310
(4). http://ca.go.ke/index.php/purpose-of-the-fund
(5). http://ca.go.ke/index.php/universal-service-advisory-council

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