Home | Sign up for newsletters!

About

Advanced Search

Networks & Infrastructure

Busy U.S. cell networks a bonanza for gear makers

Market for backhaul equipment will double to $10.9 billion in 2013

      

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Dropped calls may be annoying to a mobile phone user but network equipment makers and operators are eyeing a big payday from congested cellphone networks.


Flashy smartphones like Apple Inc's iPhone, which allow downloads of everything from games to stock prices, are straining mobile networks and pushing carriers to upgrade wired broadband connections to cell towers, known as backhaul.

The market for backhaul equipment will double to $10.9 billion in 2013 from $4.6 billion in 2008, according to research firm Infonetics.

This will provide new areas of growth for network equipment makers such as Alcatel Lucent, Ciena, Nokia Siemens, a venture of Nokia and Siemens.

The Supercomm telecom trade show in Chicago this week was buzzing with operators and gear makers talking up the new possibilities of backhaul.

"We're seeing at this show, really a lot of demand for optical backhaul capability," said Nokia Siemens North American President Sue Spradley.

Operators like Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc are beefing up their backhaul by replacing old copper wires with fast fiber optic connections in markets where they have both a wired and a wireless network.

They are working on new deals with local operators outside their wireline markets to improve mobile data rates there.

Telecom operators such as Level 3 Communications Inc and Qwest Communications International Inc and cable operators such as privately held Cox Communications all want be first to lay fiber to a cell site to make sure they win the backhaul contract with the wireless operators which have equipment there.

Spradley said the U.S. market had a real requirement for upgrades as operators want to avoid bottlenecks in their increasingly popular data networks.

IPhone users, who tend to download more data than average mobile phone owners, have criticized AT&T's slow data speeds and the company has said it is building a stronger backhaul.

"If you have a really fast radio link and you don't have a large pipe you're slowing down the network," said Spradley, adding she had customers signing deals worth a few million to the $50 million range at the trade show.

The executive said she expects the small operators who made initial orders for backhaul equipment to come back for more once they win business for upgrading more cell sites.

LOCAL WHOLESALE BOOST

Some local telecom companies struggling with home phone disconnections, are also getting new wholesale telecom business from the trend.

Qwest, which runs a long distance fiber service for businesses as well as local phone and Internet services for consumers, said it is already seeing growth from backhaul.

Qwest Chief Financial Officer Pieter Poll said in an interview that his company had received inquiries from wireless operators about backhaul upgrades for about 7,500 cell sites out of 17,000 across Qwest's operating states.

The executive said this was a sign of strong demand even if Qwest does not ultimately win the backhaul contract for all these sites, as it competes heavily with cable providers.

Where it does win contracts, Poll said it could mean consumers in nearby communities may end up with higher-speed residential services sooner than they would have otherwise.

Level 3, a service provider with a long-distance fiber network that serves businesses and other carriers, announced a new backhaul service offering this week.

Verizon Wireless, a venture of Verizon Communications and Vodafone Group Plc, is planning to upgrade its backhaul for its next-generation network, which it promises to put in as many as 30 markets in 2010.

"For 4G, whether its WiMax or LTE, the backhaul will have to be fortified," Mark Wegleitner, a senior vice president for technology at Verizon, said in an interview.

Long Term Evolution (LTE) is the 4G technology Verizon will use, and WiMax is a rival technology.

Estimates vary as to how much carriers will have to boost their backhaul links, which can typically move around 6 Megabits of data per second to 10 Megabits per second (Mbps).

Qwest says some of its customers are looking for speeds as high as 350 Megabits per second, but Wegleitner said upgrades to a range of 30 Mbps to 50 Mbps would be more typical. But he noted that the company would be ready to upgrade to 300 Mbps in busier cell sites.

"Cranking up the hardware, once you've fiber installed, isn't that hard to do," he said.

The M2M Switch - turning the wireless business model upside down -- September 1, 2010

Vivendi raises 2010 goals after strong first-half results -- September 1, 2010

FCC cuts off free nationwide broadband potential indefinitely -- September 1, 2010

Shipments of Bluetooth, NFC, UWB, 802.15.4 and Wi-Fi ICs will increase 20% in 2010 -- September 1, 2010

3PAR claims widespread uptake for VMware 'vSphere' service -- August 31, 2010

Related articles:

Baltimore will move forward with smart grid -- August 17, 2010
Baltimore Gas and Electric Company, a subsidiary of Constellation Energy, today announced that it will move forward with implementation of smart grid throughout its Central Maryland service territory.

Verizon drives over thirty thousand miles to test network reliability -- August 11, 2010
That four-wheel drive sport utility vehicle you passed on I-65, I-64, I-75 or any of a number of local Kentucky thoroughfares may have been a Verizon Wireless test vehicle. The company's unmarked test vehicles, driven by local Verizon Wireless network systems performance engineers, traveled 33,682 miles of local highways and byways in Kentucky, Indiana and Michigan to test the Verizon Wireless network and the networks of competitors in the first half of 2010.

PowerSecure sees increased demand for their smart grid systems -- August 3, 2010
PowerSecure International, Inc. announced yesterday it has been awarded $10 million of new orders for its Interactive Distributed Generation smart grid power systems (IDG systems), and utility infrastructure projects. The new business includes a recurring revenue contract with an unspecified U.S. retailer to deploy an initial group of IDG systems to deliver energy efficiencies and provide standby power for its distribution centers and retail locations.

EXFO and CENX partner to deliver 'off-net' SLA monitoring -- July 28, 2010
EXFO Inc. and CENX Inc. have announced a partnership that will result in deployment of off-net service-level agreement (SLA) monitoring for Carrier Ethernet services. Previously, when a service provider needed SLA monitoring to off-net locations via a partner network, their practical choices were to “run blind,” with no ability to measure, alarm and report on the Ethernet service quality to these off-net locations, or deploy customer premises monitoring equipment at each of these off-net locations.

M2M Zone Keep up with the latest in Machine-to-Machine Communications:

Read M2M Newsdesk
News, research, show coverage and more, covering the M2M industry.

Visit the M2M Zone
M2M Zone Seminars offer the latest information, directly from industry leaders and experts. The M2M Zone is a fixture at top-shelf trade shows including CeBIT and CTIA Wireless. Learn more about what the M2M Zone offers.


Horizon House Network
Microwave Journal
Wireless & RF News


BVD Electronic Publishing
Hosting & Development

Advertisement

©2010 Telecommunications Online & Horizon House Publications®.

 
Home | NewsGlobe | Events | Contact Us | Register | About Us | Advertise

All rights reserved. Privacy Policy.

Advertisement




Let the news come to you
Sign up for newsletters!