VSAT Services: Ready for Business

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Policy and Regulatory Challenges – Technology Providers View February 14 Challenges for Successful Implementation of ICT Projects Challenges for Successful.
Advertisements

2007 Gas & Oil Application Presentation © Copyright Netronics Inc.
Tony Naaman Systems Architecture iDirect, USA
ORG. ENTITY GSM WIFI VIRTUAL SERVICE NETWORK. Support for wired and wireless networked workstations Wireless PDAs Integrated GPS VoIP Integrated Video.
African Wholesale Traffic Aggregation Opportunities 2010 and beyond.. HKG Co-Lo Conference - October 2010.
Integrated Solutions Using Commercial Satellite For Government and Military Requirements 1 An ESSI Company FCC Annual Satellite Forum 2005 Integrated Solutions.
LLU and Broadband Regulation in France July 2005 Autorité de Régulation des Communications Electroniques et des Postes.
Building a case for Africa by Michele McCann - NAPAfrica Protect. Connect. Grow.
W I R E L E S SW I R E L E S S Broad Band Two-way VSAT Marketing Presentation.
THURAYA Proprietary Information1 The Role of Satellite Telecommunications in Bridging the Digital Divide Mohamed Al Ghanim Senior Manager Product Management.
© 2007 Verizon. All Rights Reserved. PTE /07 FCC Workshop Global Broadband Connects the World Jacquelynn Ruff Vice President, International Public.
Evaluation of Mobile Offloading in Home Wireless Access Market Samuel Costa Supervisor: Professor Heikki Hämmäinen Instructor: M.Sc. Michail Katsigiannis.
Module 4: Understanding Recent Trends in ICT Policy Dr Tim Kelly, Lead ICT Policy Specialist, infoDev/World Bank Sunday 8 March 2009.
Vivien Foster & Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, World Bank.
Peering, network sharing, interconnects Eckart Zollner September 2014.
Our solution This solution is available on Orange’s seamless network in TDM or IP: a single interconnection gives you access to all our destinations. an.
Caspian Opportunities & Challenges Eugene Pradas VP, Global Voice Sales Europe April 2010.
NEWskies November 2001 Presentation Internet in South East Asia Thailand Eui Koh Vice President Sales, Asia Pacific.
International Telecommunication Union Committed to Connecting the World The World in 2009: ICT Facts and Figures Jaroslaw K. PONDER Strategy and Policy.
© Copyright Alvarion Ltd Gas & Oil Application Presentation.
WiMAX Technology Jokkmokk May Pablo Vila R&D Manager Albentia Systems Networking for Communications Challenged Communities:
1 Internet Society Creating an Enabling Environment for the Internet: Role of IXPs ENOG 8 – 9 September 2014, Baku Maarit Palovirta, European Regional.
NGNs – Network Nirvana? David Goldie, Chairman. This document is uncontrolled if printed or saved to a non-authorised site. Slide 2 Opal, the B2B division.
The ICT Sector in Zambia Presented by: Ministry of Communications and Transport Overview & Investment Perspective.
By Omkar KiraniSridhara Chaitanya Sannapureddy Vivek Gupta 1.
1 Proprietary and Confidential This presentation constitutes proprietary and confidential information of Gilat Satellite Networks Ltd. This presentation.
“Broadband Projects for Greece” CHRISTOS MOSCHONAS Telecom Projects Director Information Society S.A. “Speeding up NGN ubiquity : a pillar for digital.
9 March 2001 Page 1 Broadband in Australia Vicki MacLeod Manager Public Policy and International Regulatory Legal & Regulatory
23 April 2009 African Economic Outlook 2008/2009 UNECA A review of the ICT sector 2008/09 David Ogong, Director, Competition and Corporate Affairs Uganda.
ICT Policies for the Caribbean: Taking Stock and Setting Priorities Dr. Heather E. Hudson Professor, ICT Management and Policy Graduate School of Business.
EUROCONSULT FOR digital ship Hamburg 2015
1. 2 From modest beginnings as a small telephone exchange in Oak Ridge, Louisiana, serving fewer than 100 customers. CenturyTel has grown to become one.
1/22 TURKSAT A.S. “Communication is Everything” NIHAT OKTAY, CMO 29 April 2010.
ITU Workshop on Satellites in IP and Multimedia, Geneva, 11/12/02 Patrick AGNIERAY, Marketing Director User perspective.
ITU INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATION UNION. TELECOMMUNICATION FSS = Fixed Satellite Service MSS = Mobile Satellite Service.
1 TINF 2010 Tuesday 30 November 2010 Present and Future Regulation of Electronic Communications Vesa Terävä European Commission Information Society & Media.
Global Networks. How do TNCs affect global wealth? –TNCs still bring FDI and often pay workers more than the national average. This money is then spent.
Local loop Unbundling Dr. ZOUAKIA Rochdi ANRT. Presentation outline Definition of Unbundling local loop (LLU) Importance of LLU Types of LLU : Description.
© GSM Association 2009 UNIVERSAL ACCESS: MOBILE VOICE, DATA, BROADBAND FOR ALL Robindhra Mangtani, Senior Director, Government & Regulatory Affairs, GSMA.
ГММ -1( а ) Li Jianfei. By 2040, the world and, in particular, countries which have large and technologically advanced economies – such as the USA,
PRESENTED BY : P:MARREDDY07681A0453 WIRELESS SYSTEM WIRELESS SYSTEM.
By: Satya Mekala Multi GSM network Solution for Africa.
DVB-RCS systems in corporate networks ITU-CoE Bahrein December 9, 2003 Peter Schellaert.
01. SATELLITE CELLULAR BACKHAUL
LEVERAGING ON NigComSat-1R FOR CONVERGENCE & INNOVATIVE SERVICES WEST AFRICA CONVERGENCE CONFERENCE -WACC 2016 ON THEME: ENGAGE, REGULATE, LEVERAGE,
Operational Objectives
C21-BT 21CN: the next steps A global innovation platform
Digital divide : regulatory aspects
Digital Divide in South Africa
ITU INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATION UNION
Emerging ICT needs – a Practitioners Perspective
Globalization.
Converter Transformer Market by Configuration, Voltage level, Application and Region - Global Forecast to 2020.
Creating Europe’s Leading Two-Way Broadband Service Provider
Internet Interconnection
Scalable and Worldwide Cloud Platform Powers Expansion for White-Label Mobile TV Solution MINI-CASE STUDY “Microsoft Azure played a vital role in the design.
DRIVERS FOR BUILDING NEW SYSTEMS: Speed and Versatility
Industry analysis OIL AND GAS.
Terrestrial Transmission Networks in Africa
Mitel Network – SIP Trunking Discussion
Multimedia issues : Industry perspective (part I)
Trac Networks Presentation of TracSat
ETSI Technical Committee TCCE
Stimulating Rural WiMAX
GLOBAL INDICATORS WORKSHOP ON COMMUNITY ACCESS TO ICT
IP connectivity in the Least Developed Countries
Generator Sales Market by Type (Diesel, Gas), Application (Standby, Peak Shaving, Continuous), Power Rating ( 5000 KVA), End-User.
5G (IMT-2020) Enabling Digital Services
The case for delivering C-Band services
Global economic growth
Presentation transcript:

VSAT Services: Ready for Business Presented by – Nick Taylor Director, Telecoms Services 9th December 2003

How VSAT Technologies Have Empowered the Telecoms Sector Growth A Case Study of the Nigerian Market presentation.ppt

Nigerian Telephony Market Overview Population - 124 million Teledensity - 2.5% (increased from 0.58% since 2002) Fixed Lines - 720,000 Wireless Lines - 270,000 Mobile Lines - 2,000,000 (90% of the increase has been in the mobile sector) With a more stable political environment and growing economy, mainly due to oil exports, the market potential for both consumer and professional Telecoms services remains very high presentation.ppt

Main growth areas for Telecoms services Mobile subscribers due to increase to 8 million in five years (as demanded by the regulator) Increased development of oil sector is driving business voice and data requirements High demand for Internet services from both business and consumers/Internet cafes Due to poor terrestrial infrastructure deployment of satellite based technology is in high demand throughout the country (80% of total bandwidth serving West Africa). presentation.ppt

Driving factors – Why choose satellite? Service deployment is very quick and not as geographically dependant Lower CAPEX and initial running costs Service providers can cover the whole country or region with single platform offering Flexible and scaleable bandwidth driven by demand Fewer nodes and bottlenecks Data rate can be adjusted to the users needs presentation.ppt

Technologies currently deployed C-band Traditional SCPC duplex services DVB IP with SCPC return path TDM / TDMA shared bandwidth hubs Ku-band DVB IP with SCPC return path (PanAmSat SPOTbytes) DVB RCS shared bandwidth hubs In many cases more than one platform can operate on a single transponder presentation.ppt

Which technologies for which markets? C-band SCPC VSAT links Mobile/GSM operators for both National and International Trunks Oil and Gas Corporates Tier 2 ISP’s Generally higher quality/availability, although higher cost in terms of bandwidth and remote terminals Ku-band DVB and TDMA platforms Corporate data networks with high quantity of sites Tier 3 ISP’s Internet Café’s and Call shops VoIP operators Lower cost terminals and smaller antenna sizes more suited to large volume of remote sites All the above networks are currently running over PAS-1R into Nigeria presentation.ppt

Focus on GSM Backhaul BSC extension Hub inter-MSC link Hub TC/MSC inter-MSC link Hub BTS BTS extension BTS BSC BTS presentation.ppt

Key drivers for GSM trunk VSAT links High bandwidth – generally E1 (2Mb/s trunks) High availability required (99.9%), therefore limited to C-band in tropical areas Lowest latency required Therefore simple SCPC architecture most desirable Single satellite solution for Intra-country trunks and International trunks desirable presentation.ppt

Focus on DVB RCS networks Diagram of PAS-1R DVB RCS systems architecture DVB Outbound MF TDMA Return University ISP Distance learning HUB (Corporate LAN) Terrestrial Network presentation.ppt

Key Markets for DVB-RCS systems Large networks where several hundred locations need to be interconnected Banks/financial networks Rural Telephony Distance Learning Telemetering / SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) Low remote terminal costs ($2K - $3K) become main driver Network operators looking to target the lower end of ISP market and also smaller corporate networks Where higher costs of traditional VSAT terminals would be a large barrier to winning sales Hub costs can be shared between several networks Interoperability allows for future competition between networks presentation.ppt

Still a very high demand for satellite based networks Future trends Short to medium term Still a very high demand for satellite based networks As business grows communication grows, with the rapid market growth and poor infrastructure satellite technologies are well placed to take a major share of new business Longer term Fibre roll out starts to take market share As growth develops and infrastructure improves terrestrial fibre networks will be able to provide higher quality and lower prices where local volumes are high when compared to satellite. Fibre services in the main cities will take over a proportion of the market. However satellite plays THE key role in developing the business in the first place, it generates demand and provides a strong core market for the future terrestrial networks. When fibre moves in the satellite networks move out to the more remote areas. presentation.ppt

How does this translate into Middle East Markets The Similarities Developing requirements for international communications Diverse market with poor infrastructure in remote areas Large influence of oil dependant industries The Differences Over regulation in some parts will stifle growth Less foreign investment reduces international requirements Lack of competition in some countries leaves customers with less choice and higher prices Due to climate difference Ku band can achieve 99.9% availability presentation.ppt

PanAmSat capacity for the Middle East Market PAS-4 Ku-band Europe/Russia Beam PAS-4 Ku-band Middle East Beam PAS-10 Ku-band Europe/Middle East Beam PAS-10 Ku-band Europe/Western Asia Beam (Stans) PAS-10 C-band Global Beam PAS-7 Ku-band Europe/Middle East Beam presentation.ppt

Back presentation.ppt

Back presentation.ppt

Back presentation.ppt

Back presentation.ppt

Back presentation.ppt

Back presentation.ppt