Cellular Machine-to-Machine Module Shipments to Increase Fourfold by 2013
Markets for cellular machine-to-machine (M2M) communication modules - the
radio units providing wireless connectivity to a range of devices that
communicate without human intervention - are expected to show strong growth in
the coming years.
According to new market data from ABI Research, shipments will
total nearly 80 million modules in 2013.
“The latest cellular M2M module market data collated by ABI Research shows
strong growth trends that are closely in line with our earlier forecasts,”
says senior analyst Sam Lucero. “We see four applications that will be
particularly fertile for M2M and should provide significant opportunities for
vendors.”
- OEM telematics. While encompassing a variety of services, OEM
telematics today is driven by automatic emergency service applications such
as GM’s widely deployed OnStar, as well as by in-dash navigation systems.
“In the US, the competitive response to OnStar’s success is a major
factor in promoting cellular M2M,” says Lucero. Most of the major car
manufacturers are responding with their own telematics programs. This will
be more evident in the 2009-2010 model years. Later, eCall, despite a shaky
start, is expected to create strong demand in Europe. There are also OEMT
telematics programs in the Asia-Pacific region, particularly Japan and South
Korea.
- Advanced (or “smart”) metering. Rollouts of electricity and
water meters that transmit their data automatically via powerline, wireless
sensor networks, and cellular connections are powered by utilities’ desire
for demand-response functionality, for energy-efficiency purposes as well as
operational efficiencies. It is happening in all developed regions of the
world.
- Point-of-sale terminals including ATMs. The ongoing shift to
cashless transactions sees POS applications going increasingly wireless.
Lucero notes that, “Traditionally, merchants had to arrange their own
connectivity. Now there is a global push to bundle cellular connectivity as
an offering to merchants along with the POS terminal.” Major vendors
VeriFone, Ingenico, and Hypercom are rolling out their own cellular
connectivity services worldwide.
- Home security and managed home automation. There’s a trend to add
wireless as a backup or replacement option for traditional landline
connectivity. Cellular service providers want to get into the (primarily
North American/European) security and managed home automation markets.
Posted to the site on 18th May 2008