Ultra-broadband via Satellite
Market & Data Reports - 30/04/2010
What outlook for the residential market?
This report examines the most recent developments in the US, Asia & Europe, analyzes the positioning of satellite-based solutions compared to other alternative technologies, starting with 3.5G and LTE, & assesses the opportunities tied to their deployment as fixed access solutions for residential users in EU & North Africa. And finally, the report takes a look at the status of the race to roll out ultra broadband solutions & the role that satellite can play.
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| M10310 |  | PDF | 148 |
3500 euros excl. VAT |  |
| M10310 |  | paper | 148 |
2900 euros excl. VAT |  |
| M10310 |  | PDF | 148 |
3500 euros excl. VAT |  |
| M10310 |  | paper | 148 |
2900 euros excl. VAT |  |
Additional copy at 300 euros excl. VAT Euros
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1. Executive Summary
2. Methodology
3. The race to deploy ultra broadband has begun • USA - Asia - Europe • Case studies: the UK and France
4. Switching to ultra high-speed: new digital home applications 4.1. Digitized content and digital devices 4.2. Spurring a growing demand for bandwidth
5. Is satellite a crucial technology for supplying end users with access? 5.1. Properties of two-way access 5.1.1. How it works 5.1.2. Technical details on use of the Ka band 5.1.3. Economic advantages of using the Ka band 5.1.4. Increasingly competitive commercial offers 5.1.5. Latency not a major problem 5.2. A technology that’s back in the news 5.2.1. In North America 5.2.2. In Asia 5.2.3. In Europe
6. Competing with terrestrial technologies 6.1. Wireline technologies still dominate, but wireless ultra high-speed progressing quickly 6.1.1. Wireline technologies still dominate the market: xDSL and cable modem 6.1.2. Market development 6.1.3. Tremendously popularity of wireless cellular network technologies boosted by smartphones 6.1.4. Alternative wireless technologies: Wi-Fi and WiMAX 6.1.5. Market development 6.2. Outlook for new generation ultra broadband technologies 6.2.1. FTTH 6.2.2. Market development 6.2.3. The future of mobile and 4G solutions
7. Satellite struggling to compete 7.1. Technological competitiveness 7.2. An effective solution for reducing the digital divide 7.3. Local authorities playing a decisive role in choosing the solutions to be used 7.3.1. Growing success of subscriber access points in dead zones 7.3.2. “NRA-ZO”, satellite, WiMAX, 3G: who’s going to win? 7.3.3. Coverage limits for FTTH that could revive interest in satellite 7.4. Digital terrestrial TV/broadband combination a sure development path for satellite 7.4.1. Satellite DTT can be combined with the SES Astra Astra2Connect offer 7.4.2. Eutelsat could pirouette and follow suit
8. Market segmentation criteria 8.1. Socio-economic criteria • PC penetration, GDP per capita, rural population density 8.2. Criteria applied to terrestrial broadband and ultra broadband rollouts • DSL, FTTx and 3G network coverage • Broadband access: penetration, access speeds, prices 8.3. Criteria applied to the development of satellite TV • Satellite dish equipment levels • Penetration levels for satellite pay-TV offers 8.4. Main issues and areas of uncertainty • Tied to the development of wireline and wireless networks • Tied to the TV market structure and public authority involvement 8.5. Forecasts for satellite subscribers and repeaters employed, 2010-2014
9. Future superfast broadband technologies 9.1 Future is no longer Ka, but Q and V 9.2 Glossary |
• What plans have European countries adopted to reduce the digital divide?
• Is satellite part of the solutions included in these plans?
• Does satellite have a part to play in the current race to deploy ultra broadband?
• What assets does satellite have compared to LTE?
• What is the potential market for a high-speed satellite solution between now and 2014?
> The report is delivered with its database |
• Wild Blue • Hughes Communications • ViaSat • TeleSat • IPStar • Avanti Broadband • Eutelsat Tooway and Satellite KA-SAT • SES Astra Astra2Connect |
Table 1: A selection of national European plans Table 2: A selection of national European plans Table 3: The three FTTH/B rollout zones defined in France Table 4: Network digitization Table 5: Digital home market drivers Table 6: Comparison of some of the offers available in France in 2004 and in 2010 Table 7: Future range of bitrates expected to be supplied by the Tooway solution, based on KA-SAT Table 8: Properties of xDSL technologies Table 9: Features of cable modem standards Table 10: Properties of cable technologies Table 11 Properties of 3G technologies Table 12: Performance supplied by 802.11 standards Table 13: Properties of Wi-Fi technologies Table 14: Fixed WiMAX performance Table 15: Properties of WiMAX technologies Table 16: Description of mobile Internet offers available in a selection of countries at the end of 2009 Table 17: UK vendor pricing, at the end of 2009 Table 18: Examples of WiMAX rollouts that are underway or being planned in Europe and North Africa (end of 2009) Table 19: The different Ethernet-based FTTH/B network configurations Table 20: Properties of WiMAX technologies Table 21: Significant FTTH/B rollouts in Europe as of the end of 2009 Table 22: Properties of 4G technologies Table 23: Access rates achieved by LTE in the 2.6 GHz band (2x20 MHz, MIMO 2x2) Table 24: Access rates achieved by LTE in the 800 MHz band (2x10MHZ, MIMO 2X2) Table 25: Strengths and weaknesses of the main Internet access technologies Table 26: Estimated number of households not connected to a fixed broadband network at the end of 2008 Table 27: Local authorities’ WiMAX rollout strategies Table 28: Status of WiMAX rollouts in France, at the end of 2008 Table 29: Examples of residential market FTTH rollouts initiated by local authorities Table 30: The TNTSat offer
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Figure 1: Changing consumption patterns demand increased bitrates Figure 2: Forecasts for the number of residential two-way broadband satellite subscribers, 2010-2014 Figure 3: List of countries examined in this report Figure 4: Location of poor quality lines in the UK Figure 5: Broadband eligibility (ADSL and fibre) Figure 6: CAPEX needed to cover the entire population of France with FTTH access Figure 7: Planned scenarios for supplying the whole of France with ultra high-speed access Figure 8: Changes in consumption made possible by increased access rates Figure 9: The pioneer digital home and associated bandwidth Figure 10: How two-way Internet access via satellite works Figure 11: Hughes’s global footprint Figure 12: Example of beam coverage with frequency reuse Figure 13: Estimated cost of bandwidth for Ka-band systems (launched satellite) Figure 14: Change in the price of a broadband satellite reception terminal Figure 15: Main uses of the Internet Figure 16: Main uses of the Internet in French households Figure 17: Breakdown of Internet users by age group, for each application Figure 18: Growth of the WildBlue subscriber base Figure 19: Breakdown of WildBlue subscribers by population density Figure 20: Impact of WildBlue on Ka-band terminal shipments in the United States Figure 21: Residential Internet access services marketed by WildBlue Figure 22: Growth of HughesNet subscribers Figure 23: The new service architecture with the SpaceWay 3 satellite Figure 24: The Spaceway transmission system Figure 25: Residential Internet access services marketed by Hughes Figure 26: Coverage provided by the Viasat-1 Figure 27: ViaSat-1 development roadmap Figure 28: Estimation of the ViaSat-1’s capacity, in Gbps, compared to other Ka, Ku and C-band satellites in North America Figure 29: Advantages of the Viasat-1 Figure 30: Growth of the installed base of Ka-band terminals in Canada Figure 31: Coverage provided by the Thaicom 4/IPStar satellite Figure 32: IPSTAR service footprint at the end of 2009 Figure 33: The IPSTAR service’s footprint as of mid-2009 Figure 34: Geographical breakdown of IPSTAR customers in Australia Figure 35: Growth of IPSTAR terminal sales Figure 36: Breakdown of IPSTAR terminal shipments by sector, at the end of 2009 Figure 37: Current coverage of the Avanti service on Intelsat IS-903 Figure 38: Performance of the HylasOne satellite Figure 39: Footprint of the service provided by Avanti Figure 40: Avanti business model at the end of 2008 Figure 41: Tooway Ka and Ku-band coverage Figure 42: Tooway offers distributed by Sat2Way in France, as of January 2010 Figure 43: Coverage provided by the Eutelsat Ka-Sat Figure 44: The Sat3Play system architecture Figure 45: Triple play via Astra2Connect Figure 46: SES Global’s market view Figure 47: Range of speeds offered by Nordnet Figure 48: Combined high-speed access/TV reception via satellite Figure 49: DSL variants, according to downstream bitrate Figure 50: Theoretical performance of ADSL2+, VDSL and VDSL2 Figure 51: DOCSIS 3.0 deployments in Europe Figure 52: European broadband market structure by access technology, Q4 2009 Figure 53: North African broadband market structure by access technology, Q4 2009 Figure 54: Change in the monthly price of a basic DSL service Figure 55: Number of sites for covering the population with HSxPA and Mobile WiMAX Figure 56: Mobile Internet development in the United States in 2008-2009 Figure 57: Percentage of broadband subscribers who are mobile broadband subscribers, as of June 2008 Figure 58: Rate of mobile Internet use in the past six months, by age group Figure 59: Growth of the number of daily hits in the US, by mobile application, 2008-2009 Figure 60: Mobile Internet applications in France in 2009 Figure 61: Where French users access the mobile Internet in 2008 Figure 62: Comparative use of applications by iPhone and smartphone users vs. owners of standard mobile handsets, in 2008 Figure 63: Growth of mobile handset sales worldwide, 2007-2013 Figure 64: Broadband customer growth, 2007-2014 Figure 65: Growth forecasts for mobile IP traffic worldwide, up to 2013 Figure 66: Volume of mobile IP traffic compared to total IP traffic, in 2009 and 2013 Figure 67: WiMAX network rollouts around the globe at the end of 2009 Figure 68: Future WiMAX subscriber base Figure 69: Population covered by WiMAX networks at the end of 2009 Figure 70: Different possible FTTH/B network configurations Figure 71: Different components of an FTTH/B network Figure 72: A ring network configuration Figure 73: Global 3G LTE system rollouts (starting in 2010-2011) Figure 74: The path from GSM to 3GLTE Figure 75: Timetable for freeing up spectrum in the 2500-2690 MHz band in France Figure 78: Future of mobile technologies Figure 79: Comparison of current technologies Figure 80: Satellite’s positioning for supplying broadband access services in rural areas Figure 81: Strategy for reducing the digital divide, and goals Figure 82: Winds footprint (Kizuna) Figure 83: Distance from the ADSL exchange, depending on location Figure 84: The “NRA-ZO” system in France Figure 85: Local authorities’ area of involvement since regulatory changes adopted in 2004 Figure 86: Cost of an FTTH connection, according to Alcatel-Lucent Figure 87: Cost of an FTTH connection, according to UK regulator, Ofcom Figure 88: Map of the switchover from analogue to digital terrestrial broadcasting Figure 89: Diagram of the equipment needed to receive the TNTSat service Figure 90: DTT/broadband via satellite combination Figure 91: PC penetration rate in 2007 Figure 92: GDP per capita in 2009 Figure 93: Population density in Europe Figure 94: Population density in North Africa Figure 95: Total DSL network coverage at the end of 2008 (% of the population) Figure 96: DSL coverage of urban and suburban areas at the end of 2008 (% of the population) Figure 97: DSL coverage of rural areas at the end of 2008 (% of the population) Figure 98: Growth in the number of homes passed in Europe since mid-2005 Figure 99: FTTx network coverage at the end of 2008 (% of the population) Figure 100: Total 3G network coverage at the end of 2008 (% of the population) Figure 101: 3G network coverage in rural areas at the end of 2008 (% of the population) Figure 102: Broadband penetration as of Q32008 Figure 103: End-user DSL bitrates in Europe and North Africa, at the end of 2008 Figure 104: End-user cable bitrates in Europe and North Africa, at the end of 2008 Figure 105: Average price of a broadband offer (DSL & Cable) at the end of June 2009 – 4Mbps downlink Figure 106: Average price of a broadband offer (DSL & Cable) at the end of 2009 – 10 Mbps downlink Figure 107: Percentage of households equipped with a satellite dish at the end of 2008 Figure 108: DTH subscriber base at the end of 2008 Figure 109: Forecasts for the number of residential two-way broadband satellite subscribers, 2010-2014 Figure 110: Terabit satellite in the development stage at 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ALGERIA AUSTRIA BELGIUM BULGARIA CZECH REPUBLIC DENMARK EGYPT ESTONIA FINLAND FRANCE GERMANY GREECE HUNGARY IRELAND ITALY LATVIA LITHUANIA LIBYA MOROCCO NETHERLANDS NORWAY POLAND PORTUGAL ROMANIA SLOVAKIA SLOVENIA SPAIN SWEDEN SWITZERLAND TUNISIA TURKEY UNITED KINGDOM
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GDP per capita Population (total, urban, rural) Density PC penetration DSL coverage 3G coverage FTTx coverage Broadband subscriber base (DSL, Cable, FTTH, others) Terrestrial broadband prices DSL subscribers by speed Cable subscribers by speed Satellite equipped households Households subscribing to satellite |
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