Abu Saeed Khan Senior Policy Fellow, LIRNEasia Longest International Open-access Network CommunicAsia 2011 June 22, 2011 Singapore.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Providing the right Backbone Infrastructure for Broadband Folu Aderibigbe, Head Glo1.
Advertisements

New Trans-Pacific Cable Systems and Potential Opportunities
Carlsbad, CA | Washington, DC | Exeter, UK | Singapore | | Submarine and Terrestrial Network Developments.
© Copyright 2011 Tata Communications Ltd. All rights reserved. 1 AS6453 From IPv6 day to IPv6 everyday APAN 33 meeting Chiang Mai, Thailand February 2012.
African Wholesale Traffic Aggregation Opportunities 2010 and beyond.. HKG Co-Lo Conference - October 2010.
Global Dynamism Index (GDI) 2013 summary report Model developed by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU)
~23 Kilnam Chon APAN/IAK Broadband Networks in Asia AP* Retreat.
The State of ICT Network Connectivity Sami Ahmed BASIS December 4, 2014.
Economic Research Department. Hong Kong Branch. 1 Carlos III 27 de marzo 2008 EU & Asia (China) Alicia Garcia Herrero.
1 FDI Confidence Index ® 2003 FDI Confidence Index ® The Global Business Policy Council Press Slides September 2003.
ESCAP, Information and Communications Technology and Disaster Risk Reduction Division Connecting economies and empowering people Asia-Pacific Information.
Asia’s role in the future Randy Kluver Institute for Pacific Asia Texas A&M University.
© 2007 Verizon. All Rights Reserved. PTE /07 FCC Workshop Global Broadband Connects the World Jacquelynn Ruff Vice President, International Public.
Contents Introduction FLAG global fibre-optic Architecture Overview
2-1 Chapter 2 THE NON ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT FOR INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT.
Non-Life Insurance Valuation Issues in Asia Sam Gutterman, FCAS, FSA.
WORLD ENERGY INVESTMENT OUTLOOK
Responding the Challenges of Continuing IP Traffic Growth
Vivien Foster & Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, World Bank.
Li Jiming Deputy Director General of Yunnan Department of Commerce PRC, June 2011 Yunnan International E-commerce Company.
Internet pricing and price comparisons Dr Tim Kelly, ITU ITU/TOT Workshop on ‘Trends in Telecom Prices and Costing in Developing Economies of the Asia.
*United States estimate based on Q monthly average. For all of the most current estimates of U.S. cross-platform video consumption, please refer.
Singapore as an International Financial Centre Ker Sin Tze Trade Representative Singapore Trade Office in Taipei At the 14 th Annual Conference on Pacific.
Digital Content & IP Transit Growth Caspian Telecoms, Istanbul, Turkey, 24 th April 2014 Konstantin Novikov Wholesale, CIS countries.
NEWskies November 2001 Presentation Internet in South East Asia Thailand Eui Koh Vice President Sales, Asia Pacific.
The Rise of China & India. Rapid Economic Growth in China Economic Growth rates of 9.5% are expected to continue Economic Growth rates of 9.5% are expected.
Study initiated by Open Society Forum Team Leader: D. Jargalsaikhan, MBA (Finance), Daniels College of Business, University of Denver, USA Senior Researcher:
International Telecommunication Union Committed to Connecting the World The World in 2009: ICT Facts and Figures Jaroslaw K. PONDER Strategy and Policy.
Colombo, Sri Lanka, October UNCTAD Regional Roundtable on Electronic Commerce and Development, Colombo (Sri Lanka) October 1999 LDCs.
The ICT Sector in Zambia Presented by: Ministry of Communications and Transport Overview & Investment Perspective.
Assessing Vendors, Services, Governments and Countries MIGRATING TO THE CLOUD IN ASIA Jerry Wertelecky Asia Cloud Computing Association HKU Discussion.
Digital Silk Rout Regional Interconnectivity toward better and faster social and economic development Baryalai Hassam Deputy Minister Technical September.
BRIDGING THE DIGITAL DIVIDE A Basic Understanding.
TASIM/EuraCA New Platforms for Improving Connectivity in Eurasia.
ASEAN AND DIALOGUE PARTNERS by Deputy Secretary-General of ASEAN Ambassador Bagas Hapsoro for the 8 th ASIA ECONOMIC FORUM Phnom Penh, 18 March 2012.
Regional Connectivity Program in Sub-Saharan Africa Cecile Niang GICT Africa Team Thursday, May 5, 2005.
Presentation of Lincoln Far East Unit Trust Quarter 1 – Update Meeting Presented by Fiona Barwick Director of Regional Research Nigel Bliss Senior Portfolio.
Impacts of globalisation on the IT Sector
The importance of strengthening strategic telecom alliances.
International Research Networking David West, DANTE 26 April 2007 S Asia Planning Meeting Crystal Gateway Marriott, Arlington, Virginia TEIN2 experiences.
New Trans-Pacific Cable Systems and Potential Opportunities George McLaughlin Backbone Committee Meeting, Xi’An.
Asian Century? Pacific Asia’s pre-1997 high growth.
The Greater Mekong Subregion Development Potentials.
Kiichiro Fukasaku Development Centre
On track, on time, online, onboard Abu Saeed Khan Expert Consultation on Socio-Economic Developments and Programme Priorities. 8 December.
Simplifying Cloud Connectivity for Your Clients Presenter: Tom SharkeyTom Sharkey December 8,
Unlocking Asian Borders for New Avenue to Revenue Pacific Telecommunications Council Honolulu, Hawaii January 18, 2016 Abu Saeed Khan
Asia Leading the future Yoshio UTSUMI, Secretary-General, ITU Forum Opening, ITU T ELECOM A SIA 2004 Busan, 7 September.
ICT statistics for benchmarking economic performance The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions.
Asia-Pacific Telecommunications September 15, 2000 Christopher Irwin Standard & Poor’s and Taiwan Ratings.
In Vitro Fertilization Market in Asia Pacific (Clinics, Hospitals, Surgical Centers, Clinical Research Institutes, Banks) Number of Cycles, Revenue, Market.
Diplomacy, Technology and Finance: ESCAP’S Way Forward to Asia-Pacific Information Superhighway Expert Consultation on the Asia-Pacific Information Superhighway.
Abu Saeed Khan Senior Policy Fellow, LIRNEasia Making broadband affordable in RECC, UNESCAP September 5, 2012 Colombo.
XO International Partners Strong Relationships, Strong Connections.
Mobile Phone Insurance Revenue Forecasts: 2016 – WEBSITE Single User License: US$ 1000 Corporate User License: US$ 1500.
Unleashing Infrastructure Synergies Across Sectors
GREETINGS from THE ASSOCIATION OF ELECTRONIC INDUSTRIES IN SINGAPORE
Asia ISOM 591 April 10,
Integrating Asian finances
Abu Saeed Khan Senior Policy Fellow, LIRNEasia
For More Details Contact at
International Business
Back to basics in cross-sector infrastructure sharing
Broadband fest and famine in Asia
Broadband fest and famine in Asia
Istanbul: Emerging Gateway of Eurasia
Realities, Challenges, and Promises - Promoting the Next Generation of English Teachers in China Jun Liu May 18, 2007 Beijing, China.
INFORMATION AND DIGITAL ECONOMICS(5ECON007W)
IP connectivity in the Least Developed Countries
5G (IMT-2020) Enabling Digital Services
Presentation transcript:

Abu Saeed Khan Senior Policy Fellow, LIRNEasia Longest International Open-access Network CommunicAsia 2011 June 22, 2011 Singapore

A great shift has happened The greater shift is happening PSTN took 125 years to get 1 billion users It took mobile 10 years to get 1 st billion More than 5 billion mobile users Redefining digital divide: Ubiquitous voice and text is a reality Ubiquity of broadband is yet to happen

Ten commandments of Cloud 6.Power grid quality 7.Internet filtering 8.Business efficiency index 9.Global risk 10.ICT development "Cloud Readiness Index" Asia Cloud Forum: June 21, 2011 China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Malaysia, India, Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand. WEF, ITU, Business Software Alliance (BSA), Oxford University, International Institute Management Development, Maplecroft Global Risk Atlas and Fault Lines, TeleGeography.

Asian bandwidth is 6x costlier Source: TeleGeography. Data exclude installation and local access fees. GigE = 1,000 Mbps. $25~$40 $5~$10 $5~$7

Asia is pricier than Latin America!

Good competition Terrestrial & submarine TX Poor competition All submarine TX Issues affecting Asian BW price Fierce competition Coast-coast terrestrial TX Biggest barrier to broadband

Submarine cables are vulnerable to:  Earthquake & Cyclone (Natural)  Sabotage and political rivalry (Deliberate)  Anchoring & Fishing (Accidental)

Europe-Asia bandwidth growth (2004~09) Series of earthquakes caused <3x over-provisioning 2010 Middle East Telecommunication map, TeleGeography

Disasters driving the need of backup 1.December 26, 2006: Taiwan earthquake  21 faults in 9 cables. 11 ships took 49 days to repair. Banking, airline bookings and were stopped or delayed in China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Japan and India. 2.Jan 23~Feb : Accident or sabotage?  Sequentially 6 cables were snapped in 12 days across the Mediterranean, Persian Gulf and Andaman sea. What caused this series of cable cuts remains mysterious. 3.Dec 19, 2008: Mediterranean earthquake  Total downtime: 17 days. Middle East, India and Far East were affected. 4.August 7, 2009: Typhoon & undersea earthquakes  10 submarine cables were damaged in >20 locations. Up to 90% voice and data traffic was impacted across Japan, Taiwan, China, India and South East Asia. 5.March 4, 2010: Taiwan earthquake  Victims: SEA-ME-WE 3, APCN2, CUCN, FLAG and FNAL.

Source: TeleGeography 49 new cables US$6.5 billion 2008 to 2010 Wanted: Redundancy and diversity ( Asia~EU via IO) (Asia~USA via Pacific) Source: TeleGeography. April 11, 2011 Westbound Eastbound

Asia~USA cables are under fire

“Several factors account for the gap between purchased on used capacity, including capacity held in reserve for restoration and redundancy, contract structures (such as discounts on large purchases of bandwidth), upgrade lead times, and market inefficiencies.” (21%) (77%) (46%) Glut

Asia’s only way to Europe

Business (not) as usual NAIROBI, April 16, 2009 (Reuters)- Foreign navies have agreed to protect a vessel installing an undersea high-speed Internet cable from pirates off the coast of Somalia.

ME~Europe is getting terrestrial Jeddah-Amman- Damascus-Istanbul (JADI) Regional Cable Network (RCN) “Carriers have been seeking to introduce five undersea cable systems connected to and across Egypt to meet burgeoning capacity requirements in the Middle East, East Africa, and India, but have been delayed for over a year by regulatory problems in Egypt. This has left carriers scrambling to identify alternative routes.” TeleGeography: April 11, 2011

Iran detours via East Europe APAC to Europe via Middle East? Europe Persia Express Gateway

1)2008: Reliance and China Mobile terrestrial link. 2)2009: Tata and China Mobile terrestrial link. 3)2010: Bharti and China Mobile terrestrial link.

 State-owned PTT Closed access

Asian Highway has connected: Russia, India, China, Turkey, Central Asia, SAARC, ASEAN+2

At a glance A network of 141,000 km of standardized roadways crisscrossing 32 Asian countries connecting EU. A total of US$26 billion has already been invested in the improvement and upgrades. However, there is still a shortfall of US$18 billion. UNESCAP and ADB are looking for funds. Details in:

Asian Highway has already linked the borders. A fully meshed terrestrial LION is waiting. LION is an ‘open-access’ terrestrial consortium to link Asia and Europe

Open access is central to LION Road authorities to own LION. They obtain same license the Rail and Power authorities did. –Therefore, the incumbents (public and private) don’t feel threatened. LION opens new avenue of revenue for roads and highways. –Makes building and maintaining the roads easier.

Targets of LION 1)Diversity and Redundancy to all submarine cables linking Asia with Europe and the USA via Japan through a Terrestrial Consortium. 2)Migrate SEA-ME-WE (3 & 4) from offshore to on-shore.SEA-ME-WE (3 & 4)  Also let all private carriers to migrate. 3)No regulatory disruption. Only the licensed carriers will access LION.

Advantages of LION Presumed ‘unfriendly’ countries are already interlinked. –Submarine : SEA-ME-WE 3 and SEA-ME-WE 4.SEA-ME-WE 3 and SEA-ME-WE 4. –Terrestrial: Sino-Russian link (TEA) and Sino-Indian link (Reliance/Tata/Bharti + China Mobile). LION brings more opportunities for submarine cables. –Invest more in transpacific rather than intra-Asia. –Lower latency and higher SLA at lesser cost for the carriers. High resiliency due to mesh. –Rerouting the traffic means ‘zero’ downtime. –Installation and maintenance crew/materials available everywhere. Open access guaranteed

Internet in Asia will be similar to or cheaper than the EU. –Mobile broadband (HSPA/LTE) will grow like 2G voice. –Investments in broadband will increase. –There will be higher ROI in FTTx. More international and domestic PoPs/access nodes will emerge. Landlocked countries will have bandwidth at equal cost.  Sub-regional telecoms initiatives cannot delivered that. Sub-regional telecoms initiatives cannot delivered that. Pacific islands will enjoy reduced bandwidth cost in the mainland. International Gateway (IGW) reforms will be accelerated. –Usage of submarine cables’ purchased capacity will be maximized. –Carriers will commit longer contracts. Impacts of LION National broadband initiatives will not require subsidies.

Next: Public Private Partnership

In cooperation with the private sector, make available the benefits of new technologies, especially information and communications. PPP in MDG#8

In cooperation with the private sector, make available the benefits of new technologies, especially information and communications. PPP in MDG#8

Professor Charles K Kao ( 高 ), Father of Optical Fiber, Nobel Laureate in Physics (2009) “Sand from centuries past; Send future voices fast.”