Gigabit subscribers projected to be 100 million by 2020
Many leading markets will adopt G.fast in the next five years, with coverage in some mature countries, potentially approaching 50%, a Point Topic report predicts.
Point Topic chief executive Oliver Johnson said G.fast is a vital technology for operators with copper in their networks.
His comments come as a new Point Topic report revealed at least 100 million people are expected to be subscribed to gigabit labelled services by 2020. Between now and then, the Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of subscribers to gigabit tariffs is projected to be at least 65%. Close to 70% of growth is expected to come from the APAC region. While
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G.fast is currently only capable of these speeds over short distances, it can already secure speeds to meet the vast majority of operator demand and the technology is continually developing.
“G.fast clearly works best economically in a mature market with copper in the local loop so I expect most of today’s leading markets will have some G.fast in the next five years and some should see coverage approaching 50% of the market,” said Oliver.
The report shows there are currently less than ten million subscriptions on a gigabit connection but predicts that is set to change with more gigabit tariffs on the market than ever before and the cost of services dropping.
“The only doubt there could be is how long it can effectively compete, particularly when it comes to continued OPEX v CAPEX required for end-to-end fiber, and a lot of that depends on the next step of actually delivering it in the real mass market world,” Oliver says.
If it’s quick, clean, meets global standards and certifications such as those proposed by the Broadband Forum, and continues to offer significant NFV/SDN and vectoring improvements then it will be strong tomorrow as well as today.”
Broadband Forum chief executive Robin Mersh said operators should take the picture painted by Point Topic as a clear call to action to consider G.fast deployments in their networks and to use Broadband Forum standards and certifications, such as the newly developed YANG management models for FTTdp equipment and the interoperability testing program for G.fast devices.
“The rate of growth predicted by Point Topic’s latest figures shows the scale of the issue the broadband industry is facing and why adopting key enabling technologies for ultra-fast access is so important,” he said.
“The growing trend of gigabit services points to the fact that more and more people want to use next-generation services, like 4K video, location-based services, security, home automation, video sharing, gaming and home office collaboration. G.fast is how operators with copper in their networks can still enable all these things. The Broadband Forum programs and specifications are how those operators can exploit the promise of G.fast quickly.”
At the end of last year, the Broadband Forum launched its Broadband 20/20 vision which focuses on specific new broadband home and business opportunities that leverage SDN, NFV, Internet of Things (IoT) and enabled by ultra-fast technologies such as G.fast.
The progress achieved by the Forum while launching and adopting the Broadband 20/20 vision was acknowledged during its Hong Kong meeting, where five Outstanding Contributor of the Year awards were presented. They went to Les Humphrey of BT, Bruno Cornaglia of Vodafone, Ken Schneider of Telebyte, Rao Cherukuri of Juniper Networks and Klaus Wich of Axiros.
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