Operators Spent Nearly US$20 Billion in Mobile Backhaul Charges in 2006

Migration from TDM circuit to IP packet switching among mobile carriers has been anticipated since the debut of 2.5G data services in the mid-1990s, but exploding high speed data traffic has finally forced the migration to begin.

And good timing, too, says Infonetics Research in its latest report, because mobile operators are feeling the pain of expensive mobile backhaul costs, having shelled out US$19.5 billion to wireline service providers in 2006 alone.

"To handle all the voice, video, and data traffic created by the 2.5 billion mobile subscribers worldwide, operators are spending like crazy for more bandwidth," said Michael Howard, principal analyst of Infonetics Research.

"On the bright side, they'll get a lot more for their money in the future with next-gen equipment like microwave and IP/Ethernet, which can handle 2G/3G voice simultaneously with 2.5G/3G/3.5G data and video traffic streams, and at a fraction of the cost of traditional wireline backhaul using PDH leased lines (and ATM over PDH)," Howard added. "These improvements will allow mobile operators to slowly increase their capital investment while rapidly adding more subscribers and higher capacity services."

As noted at Infonetics' New Options for Mobile Backhaul conference at the CTIA Wireless 2007 show last week in Orlando, some operators are already testing and trialing Ethernet backhaul, and major Ethernet deployments are expected to begin by late 2007 and will be in full swing by 2008.

Report Highlights

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Posted to the site on 4th April 2007

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