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Africa Mobile Infrastructure and Mobile Broadband: Ken Research

Posted on 15 December 2016 by KenResearch Technology and Telecom ,

Improved mobile network capability in Africa stimulating smartphone adoption

Within Africa there is considerable diversity in the availability and capability of mobile telecom infrastructure. Vast tracks of the continent, particularly in the northern desert regions, are sparsely populated with little in the way of network coverage. However, intense investment programs undertaken by several pan-regional operators in recent years has meant that population coverage in most countries is excellent.

Much of the phenomenal growth in the take-up of mobile voice and data services has stemmed from the lack of fixed-line alternatives. Fixed-line networks provide limited reach, particularly so in rural areas but also in many urban areas. Before market liberalisation efforts started some two decades ago most incumbent telcos were government-owned enterprises. There was little commercial incentive to invest in infrastructure, and combined with a lack of regulatory oversight, poor management and government neglect, fixed-line penetration remained very low by global standards. In many countries, such as in the DRC, Sudan, Mozambique, South Sudan and Libya, war and civil conflict largely destroyed what little infrastructure there was in place.

Mobile voice and data services were able to fill this void very effectively. As a result, in many countries in the region the use of telecoms services is morphing from being predominantly mobile to being solely mobile. Investment in fixed-line infrastructure is being side-lined in favour of mobile infrastructure. Operators are predominantly investing in spectrum, particularly in the 700MHz band as this is being released into 2017 and 2018 following the switch from analogue to digital broadcasts. They are also strengthening the robustness of their networks by migrating from 3G to LTE-based services. This in turn is being supported by increased international connectivity from a number of new submarine and terrestrial cables. These cables are providing the required backbone infrastructure to support the growing flow of data. Prominent projects include the SACS cable running between Angola and Brazil, with onwards connectivity to Miami, as well as the Liquid Sea cable being built by the pan-regional infrastructure provider Liquid Telecom along the continent’s east coast.

Smartphones are increasingly becoming the principal mobile device used among consumers. The adoption of smartphones is being encouraged by a plethora of cheaper units manufactured locally. The growing take-up of such devices is in turn supporting a tremendous growth in m-commerce, m-money and m-banking services. With the majority of Africans being unbanked, m-payment systems are thriving in most markets where they have been deployed. This has been helped by operators facilitating money transfers between their cross-border networks, as also by co-operation among different players and by a wider number of banks hosting such services. M-money is particularly popular in markets such as Kenya, though the more sophisticated banking sector in South Africa was a contributing factor in the Vodacom’s M-Pesa service being withdrawn from that market in mid-2016.

More than three quarters of mobile subscribers on the continent are expected to subscribe to broadband services by 2020, compared to about a fifth in early 2016. With more than a billion mobile subscribers in the region this presents a vast market for vendors and application providers. Although the relatively low purchasing power in the region will not translate into a similarly rapid growth in revenue, considerable potential remains.

MOBILE INFRASTRUCTURE

High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA)

The regulator launched an international tender in mid-2010 to build and operate a third generation (3G) mobile network. It took until October 2011 to award the licence to Bharti Airtel (Airtel Gabon). To facilitate the development of 3G services a deal was brokered with Gabon Telecom in the following December allowing Bharti Airtel access to the SAT-3/WASC/SAFE submarine cable. An additional connection with the Africa Coast to Europe (ACE) cable was made in December 2012. In June 2013 © Copyright Paul Budde Communication Pty Ltd, 2016. The operator’s parent company announced plans to invest an additional $ million in its mobile operations in Gabon.

However, the Council of Ministers did not pass the decree authorising the 3G licence, extended to the use of 3.5G and 4G/LTE technologies, until January 2014, and Airtel Gabon did not secure its licence until the following March, having paid $ billion ($ million) for the year license.

In April 2014 Airtel Gabon launched a commercial W-CDMA/HSPA+ service in Libreville. The operator planned to cover the entire with the network, with a third phase expected in late 2014 to cover the second largest city, Port Gentil, and a fourth phase, to be completed by the end of 2014, reaching all provincial capitals. Bintel’s licence also includes a concession to offer 3G services. However, the company still offers only 2G and 2.5G services.

Long-term Evolution (LTE)

In March 2014 the government announced that Gabon Telecom was to be allocated additional licenses to enable it to offer 3G and 4G services. The deal was part of a number of strategic agreements signed between Morocco and the Gabonese government which cover areas including agriculture, health, housing, finance and banking, technologies, transport and tourism.

Mobile satellite services

The satellite service provider Thuraya in April 2014 signed an agreement with Bharti Airtel to provide mobile satellite services to customers across the operator's footprint, including Gabon. The project is aimed at providing satellite voice and data services to subscribers in remote and rural areas in 17 countries across the region.

Mobile payments

In early 2013 Gabon Telecom partnered with the mobile financial solutions provider Mahindra Comviva to develop its Mobi Cash mobile money services and ‘mobiquity’ mobile financial applications via its Libertis mobile division. These enable customers to make remittances, receive salary payments, pay bills and make purchases at retailers. For many Gabonese without bank accounts mobiquity provides a cost-effective banking alternative.

Mobile broadband

Internet access via General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) has been available in Kenya since 2004 from Safaricom, followed by Bharti Airtel in 2006. ISPs started to feel increased competitive pressure after 3G services were introduced by Safaricom in 2008.

For more information on the market research report please refer to the below link:

https://www.kenresearch.com/technology-and-telecom/telecommunications-and-networking/africa-mobile-infrastructure-mobile-broadband/71683-105.html

Contact: 
Ken Research
Ankur Gupta, Head Marketing & Communications
query@kenresearch.com
+91-124-4230204

...

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Asia Mobile Infrastructure and Mobile Broadband: Ken Research

Posted on 14 December 2016 by KenResearch Technology and Telecom ,

Asian mobile broadband market continues to grow strongly

With 3.9 billion mobile subscribers and over 50% of the mobile subscribers in the world, spread across a diverse range of markets, the region is already rapidly advancing in the adoption of mobile broadband services. Mobile broadband as a proportion of the total Asian mobile broadband subscriber base, has increased from 2% in 2008 to 18% in 2013, 27% in 2014, 33% in 2015 and 37% in 2016. Thus mobile broadband subscribers now account for over one third of all mobile subscribers in Asia.

Growth across the region in high speed access to the internet by means of mobile broadband services has been largely driven by highly competitive markets combined with the preparedness of the customer to embrace new generation mobile technologies. With 3G, 3G+ and 4G platforms extensively covering the region, mobile broadband services have already become well established. The rapid take up has been underpinned by increasingly cheaper smartphone prices and lower airtime tariffs combining to support even wider adoption.

A major shift from mobile voice to mobile data continues across most markets in Asia. The more highly developed markets in the region, such as Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan, have seen their mobile networks strongly driven by mobile data services. They have positioned themselves well to exploit mobile data and broadband wireless opportunities and lead the rest of the region into the next generations of mobile applications.

The mobile broadband subscriber base across all of Asia continues to grow strongly. The total number of mobile broadband subscribers has increased from 1.12 billion in 2014 to 1.41 billion in 2015 and 1.6 billion in 2016. Although the rate of increase of mobile broadband subscribers has subsided as the initial rapid rollout of services has slowed down, the growth rate is still reasonably strong, implying that there is still significant growth opportunity left in the market over the next five years to 2021, especially in the less developed Asian markets that are still predominately dependant on voice networks for mobile services.

 MOBILE BROADBAND

With the two mobile operators, Dhiraagu and Wataniya, launching 3G+ offerings in 2009/2010, there has been rapid expansion of mobile broadband services in the Maldives. By mid-2015 mobile broadband dominated the internet market in terms of subscriber numbers and growth rate.

MOBILE INFRASTRUCTURE 
 Digital networks
3G
The mobile operator Wataniya launched a commercial 3G network in 2008. The company also soft launched a 3.5G High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA) network. It progressively offered additional new generation services including Wataniya Mobile Broadband, Wataniya Mobile Video Surveillance and Wataniya Mobile TV services. The ‘Wataniya Broadband (3G+)’ service was launched in 2009.

After Wataniya successfully transitioned to the Ooredoo brand in 2013, the operator made significant strides. By September 2013 Ooredoo Maldives had extended its 3.5G HSPA+ network to the island of Kaafu Dhiffushi in line with the network modernisation plan launched in July. The HSPA+ network now covers about of the population.

Dhiraagu launched its 3G service, branded ‘3G plus’, in 2010, and quickly provided coverage across a significant proportion of the Maldives.

Dhiraagu had expanded coverage of its 3G network to all inhabited islands by the end of 2015.

LTE

The two mobile operators have made good progress in expanding their LTE services. Dhiraagu launched LTE using spectrum in the 1800MHz band in October 2014, and by January 2015 the service was available in the island of Fuvahmulah and Addu City, the country’s second largest city. In addition to these two new locations, network coverage extended to Malé City, Villingili, Hulhumale’, Ibrahim Nasir International Airport, Villingilli, Thinadhoo, Kulhudhufushi, Naifaru. In April 2016 LTE services were extended to the island of Dhidhdhoo. By August 2016 the operator’s LTE network provided population coverage.

The network initially supported download speeds of up to s, with customers experiencing average data rates of between s and s. In late 2015 Dhiraagu launched an LTE-Advanced (LTE-A) network using carrier aggregation (CA) technology (utilising its concessions in the 1800MHz and 2600MHz bands), which improved download speeds to /s downlink and s uplink.

For more information on the market research report please refer to the below link:

https://www.kenresearch.com/technology-and-telecom/telecommunications-and-networking/asia-mobile-infrastructure-mobile-broadband/63857-105.html

Contact: 
Ken Research
Ankur Gupta, Head Marketing & Communications
query@kenresearch.com
+91-124-4230204

...

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