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DigiWorld 2006: FTTH Costs Coming Down

‘Smarter’ Civil Works Helps Operators

      

Delegates at the DigiWorld 2006 summit in Montpellier are confident that the cost of rolling out FTTH will continue to decrease, making the business case more attractive.


According to a Michael Kunigonis from Corning, a fibre manufacturer, the cost per FTTH subscriber was US$2,000 two to three years ago. “That is now just under US$1,000 and we expect that to be around US$800 by the end of the year,” he said.

The reason why costs have come down, said Kunigonis, is a combination of vendors consolidating to create better economies of scale on component manufacture as well as ‘being smarter’ to reduce the cost of civil works.

Civil works, which includes the laying of fibre, accounts for the bulk of FTTH costs. According to IDATE, the research and consulting organisation, 70 per cent of the cost of rolling out FTTH to greenfield sites is accounted for by the installation of outside plant.

For serving densely-populated urban areas, which may allow operators to uses existing infrastructure – such as sewers – Sogetrel, a company which lays cable, calculates the cost of a FTTB connection as between €430-€655; it estimates the cost of a FTTH connection as between €600 and €925.

The largest slice of this cost – 25 percent – is represented by outdoor deployment. Sogetrel spokespeople claimed that these costs could be lowered further, helped by the use of remotely-controlled devices to lay the cable. How much these costs could be reduced by, the Sogetrel delegation didn’t say in their presentation.

The drop in FTTH costs was confirmed by Terry Denson, vice president at Verizon, which is investing US$23 bn through to 2010 to build out a nationwide FTTH network in the US. “At year end 2005, the cost per premise was US$1.021,” he said. “That is now down to US$850.”

According to Daniel Caclin, CEO of Erenis, a FTTB operator in Paris that has hooked up 50,000 buildings, the cost per subscriber is €700. “With the help of the local authorities [in Paris] we can cut that by 40 percent,” he said.

In July 2006, the Mayor of Paris announced a civic support plan to reduce the cost of laying cables in Paris to stimulate broadband investment. According to the initial press announcements, the proposal aimed to reduce the cost of using underground ducts by 25 per cent and to reduce the cost of connecting the last 400 metres to buildings by 90 percent.

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