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Virtual Unbundling A new wholesale product in NGA networks

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Presentation on theme: "Virtual Unbundling A new wholesale product in NGA networks"— Presentation transcript:

1 Virtual Unbundling A new wholesale product in NGA networks
Kurt Reichinger Austrian Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Broadcasting The opinions expressed in this presentation are the personal view of the author and do not prejudge decisions of the Austrian regulatory authorities.

2 Agenda The Austrian Unbundling Market Virtual Unbundling
Final Considerations The Regulator’s dilemma: Finding a balance between hard-core SMP and new soft law regulation The old Unbundling market as an example: Closing the gap between safeguarding competition and promoting innovation and taking due account of the European Commission's NGA recommendation From the ladder of investment concept to accepted products on the market: Classical Unbundling, Virtual Unbundling and Bitstream Access Final Considerations ECO PT TRIS

3 The Austrian Unbundling Market
ECO PT TRIS

4 Market Analysis Procedure
Overview Market Analysis Procedure December 2008 – Market Definition Ordinance (“TKMV08”) issued Market for “Access to physical network infrastructure” defined copper access-lines (LLU, SLU) not included: CATV, FTTH, Mobile (GSM, 3G, LTE, …) not included - but regulated: duct, dark-fibre January – Start of Market Analysis Procedure (“M 3/09”) > 500 parties involved (due to Administrative Court Decision as of 2008) TKK commissioned RTR with an expert opinion Fall 2009 – RTR expert opinion issued Market Analysis and Obligations for LLU/SLU (copper lines) Further recommendation for “NGA-related” regulation Spring/Summer 2010 – public consultation / coordination September 2010 – final decision by TKK ECO PT TRIS

5 Market Analysis - Indicators analysed
Overview Market Analysis - Indicators analysed Indicator Interpretation Market share Incumbent: near 100% Barriers to entry High „sunk cost“ Control over not easily replicable infrastructure A1 Telekom: largest access network, can offer access services nationwide Countervailing buyer power Not existing as incumbent is sole supplier No self-supply for OLOs due to high barriers to entry vertical integration Leveraging from LLU market to neighbour markets (Retail PSTN access, BB market) natural monopoly Duplication of access network not economically feasible ECO PT TRIS

6 Market Analysis – Obligations imposed
Overview Market Analysis – Obligations imposed Obligation Content Access (with cost oriented pricing) LLU, SLU, v-ULL (virtual unbundling) Annex-Services Access to Duct & Dark Fibre, Collocation and - Deployment permitted NGA Regulation Compensation for frustrated investments, coordination meetings, … Reference Offers General rules, v-ULL, Access to Duct & Dark Fibre Transparency OLO can request relevant information for planning of own FTTC/B-deployments ECO PT TRIS

7 Conclusions of the Austrian market analysis
Copper access network of A1 Telekom Austria still a „bottleneck“ But: there are also (derived) disadvantages for alternative operators in current and future NGA roll-out scenarios Lack of information Lack of economies of scale  Sole imposition of „copper-related“ remedies deemed insufficient for NGA deployment scenarios  Additional „NGA-related“ remedies seen as necessary ECO PT TRIS

8 Deployment scenarios Yesterday: Copper only Today: Copper and fibre
ADSL2+ / neu: VDSL2 Deployment scenarios Yesterday: Copper only ADSL2+: ~ 16 – 20 MBit/s ~ 25 – 30 MBit/s Today: Copper and fibre FTTC: ~ 30 – 40 MBit/s FTTB: ~ 50 – 80 MBit/s Tomorrow: Fibre only FTTH: > 100 MBit/s Glasfaser VDSL2 Glasfaser VDSL2 ECO PT TRIS Glasfaser 8

9 EC‘s recommendation on NGA regulation (2010)
 Addressing the challenge of managing competing (and sometimes conflicting) drivers in the implementation of broadband Securing investment in infrastructure and roll out, Past and future investment in active and passive infrastructure Both from incumbent and alternative operators Promoting competition both at the infrastructure and service layers, Promotion of competition on both infrastructure and service edge possibly conflicting Relaxing regulation where there are sufficient levels of competition Relaxing regulation on markets fully based on regulation may be dangerous Signals of relaxing regulation important for investment decisions Designing a framework for the transition from copper to fibre. ECO PT TRIS

10 Traditional (copper-related) remedies
Full unbundling of copper line - LLU Sub-loop unbundling of parts of copper line - SLU Co-location (incl. compensation payment when MDF is closed down) Cost orientation Non-discrimination Separated accounts ADSL2+ / neu: VDSL2 Unbundling ECO PT TRIS

11 Additional „NGA-related“ remedies
Promote alternative operator‘s investments in Allow for investments of A1 Telekom Austria in FTTC/B Promote alternative operator‘s investments in FTTC/B Keeping alternative operators competitive  Virtual unbundling FTTC FTTB ECO PT TRIS

12 Promote alternative operator‘s investments in VDSL@CO
VDSL2 from the „Central Office“ allowed nationwide as a first step Compensation payments for frustrated investment (Modem and DSLAM) in case of subsequent FTTC/B roll-out ECO PT TRIS

13 Allow for investments of A1 Telekom Austria in FTTC/B
No obligatory PSD-shaping under specific conditions Transparency regarding planned NGA-deployment Coordination meetings Compensation payment for frustrated investments (Modem, DSLAM) Cost-free migration to virtual unbundling Prioritising more advanced technologies < FTTC < FTTB < FTTH Possible risk premium for new infrastructure ECO PT TRIS

14 Promote alternative operator‘s investments in FTTC/B
No obligatory „spectrum shaping“ under same conditions as for A1 Telekom More comprehensive data delivery for FTTC/B-Planning  transparency A1 Telekom has to negotiate in the case of OLOs requesting the installation of new cabinets Access to ducts – for backhauling Cost savings – civil works Attractive access conditions – better than general rule acc to Telecoms Act Nationwide offer – not only in NGA areas Fees – similar to general rule Access to dark fibre – for backhauling Same as for duct-access BUT: only available in case of ducts not available or not economically viable ECO PT TRIS

15 Keeping alternative operators competitive
Introducing a new substitute wholesale product for physical unbundling In addition to traditional remedies on unbundling market Introducing an active (layer 2 bitstream) product on the passive wholesale market for access to physical infrastructure  Reference Offer for „Virtual unbundling“ - VULL ECO PT TRIS

16 Virtual Unbundling ECO PT TRIS

17 Virtual unbundling – 8 cornerstones
Possibility for a grade of innovation comparable with passive access Highest possible transparency for higher layers Possibility for multicast services Technological neutrality Flexibility for choosing CPE (white list) Service hand-over at MDF (or similar PoP in the NGA) Third-party service hand-over Configuration access for all relevant connection parameters or non-overbooked bandwidth between customer and PoI To be offered in NGA areas only ECO PT TRIS

18 Technical Concept of VULL Reference Offer
Overview Technical Concept of VULL Reference Offer CPE Bandwidth DSLAM POI CPE Bandwidth Bandbreite Bandbreite CPE Bandwidth Bandbreite Bandbreite Bandwidth (HP/LP) Network OLO Netz ANB CPE Bandwidth Bandbreite ECO PT TRIS

19 Reference Offer by A1 Telekom Austria
Under consultation Reference Offer by A1 Telekom Austria Modular layer 2 bitstream product based on Ethernet technology Access part: VDSL2 on copper loop with 3 bandwidths to choose from (8/20/30 MBit/s) Ordered per customer Backhaul part: Ethernet with 16 bandwidths to choose from (2 … 800 MBit/s) allowing OLOs to choose degree of overbooking – even allowing non-overbooked services Ordered per DSLAM Quality of Service: Service priorisation of Ethernet Frames using p-Bit p=5: Voice / p=4: Video / p=1: Business Internet / p=0: Residential Internet 50% of Link: high priority quality guaranteed / Remainder: low priority quality ECO PT TRIS

20 Reference Offer by A1 Telekom Austria
Under consultation Reference Offer by A1 Telekom Austria Customer Premises Equipment (VDSL2 Modem/Router) No modem included – to be chosen by OLO Minimum modem requirements defined Modem whitelist with modems tested, being qualified as properly working and guaranteeing defined service performance parameters Service hand-over for several DSLAMS at MDF location in NGA roll-out areas  1 GbE and 10 GbE Service hand-over to third party provider possible Transparency for multicast services Pricing issues Margin squeeze free ECO PT TRIS

21 VLAN Concept (1/2) VULL services are aggregated for every MDF area connected MDF area (MPoP) comprising several VDSL2 DSLAMs VULL services are mapped into double-tagged VLAN (S-Tag and C-Tag) allowing to adress customers via Layer 2 Ethernet S-Tag defines specific DSLAM VLAN-ID 10 … 2009 (i.e DSLAMs per handover point) C-Tag defines specific customer VLAN-ID 100 … 300 (i.e. 200 customers per DSLAM) p-Bit marking defines QoS VULL services are handed over to VULL partner on defined PoIs Hand-over is at today‘s MDF locations (i.e. locations with existing collocation and backhaul facilities) ECO PT TRIS

22 VLAN Concept (2/2) ECO PT TRIS

23 Prioritisation with p-Bit Marking (1/2)
VULL partner defines associated quality of data frames within bandwidth ordered for a single DSLAM using priority bit marking p-Bit = 5 … high priority p-Bit < 5 … low priority ECO PT TRIS

24 Prioritisation with p-Bit Marking (2/2)
50% of bandwidth ordered for DSLAM area available for high priority (HP) traffic according to defined service and service-class parameters Up to 100% of bandwidth ordered for DSLAM area available for low priority (LP) quality as long as bandwidth is not used for HP traffic Traffic exceeding 50% limit available for HP is discarded (p = 4 discarded before p = 5) In LP class p = 0 discarded before p = 1 Re-marking of p = 2, 3, 6, 7 to p = 0 ECO PT TRIS

25 Defined Service Parameters for VULL
ECO PT TRIS

26 Maximum Transfer Unit (MTU) Size
Limited by equipment currently used by A1TA Maximum frame size 1522 Byte (customer edge) 1526 Byte (VULL hand-over) Frame size limit to be adapted as soon as new equipment is available ECO PT TRIS

27 Pricing issues Pricing according to FL-LRAIC methodology taking into account the full range of products offered, i.e. NGA and non-NGA products Risk premium applicable for NGA products No margin squeeze in relation to A1TA retail offerings Non-NGA Non-NGA Non-NGA Non-NGA 8.192 / 768 8.192 / 768 8.192 / 768 8.192 / 768 NGA NGA NGA / 4.096 / 4.096 / 4.096 / 4.096 NGA NGA / 4.096 / 4.096 / 4.096 / 4.096 ECO PT TRIS

28 CPE – DSLAM: bandwidth and monthly fees
ECO PT TRIS

29 DSLAM – PoI: Bandwidth profiles and monthly fees
Price comparison: Full LLU: € 5,87 per month ECO PT TRIS

30 Next steps Public consultation until mid march 2011
Evaluation of consultation responses Possible adaption request from TKK Introduction of VULL on the market ECO PT TRIS

31 Final Considerations ECO PT TRIS

32 Final considerations The telecoms landscape is changing – so are regulatory interventions Some of yesterday‘s remedies may not be appropriate any longer Such remedies may have to be phased out with new remedies being carefully introduced in order to support today’s regulatory intentions Virtual Unbundling is such a new remedy that could even replace several of today’s remedies in a medium to long term perspective, e.g. Classical Unbundling Classical Bitstreaming Terminating Segments ECO PT TRIS

33 Virtual Unbundling A new remedy in NGA networks
Kurt Reichinger Austrian Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Broadcasting The opinions expressed in this presentation are the personal view of the author and do not prejudge decisions of the Austrian regulatory authorities. ECO PT TRIS 33


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