Europe
: Research and Markets has announced the addition of 3G Mobile Networks:
Vendor Positioning and Deployment Strategies to their offering.
This report provides
an exhaustive analysis of network evolution to 2.5/3G.
It evaluates 2.5/3G
mobile wireless technologies and standards and recommends strategies
for upgrading from 2G to 3G networks cost effectively.
The report examines
in detail offerings and deployments of each of the major vendors by
region and provides their market shares by technologies. It also provides
five-year base station forecasts.
This report presents
technology and market trends as operators upgrade their current Second
Generation (2G) mobile wireless networks which are voice-centric,
to the more feature-rich Second Generation Plus (2.5G) networks, followed
by Third Generation (3G) networks capable of supporting advanced high-speed
services.
The report highlights
technology, market, and cost trends as operators migrate to next generation
networks. It provides global and regional ranking of major infrastructure
equipment vendors.
The report presents
detailed technology and market positions of the top nine 3G infrastructure
equipment vendors - Alcatel, Ericsson, Lucent Technologies, Motorola,
NEC Corporation, Nokia, Nortel Networks, Samsung Electronics, and
Siemens.
These vendors
are ranked by their 3G technology positions, both globally and in
the five reference regions - North America, Asia-Pacific, Cala (Caribbean
Latin America), Europe-Russia and Africa-Middle East.
The analysis also
examines global and regional technology trends based on the number
of 3G contracts and the actual number of deployments or rollouts,
resulting in commercially available 3G networks. The analysis reviews
2.5/3G mobile wireless technologies and standards as well as strategies
for upgrading from 2G to 3G networks cost effectively. A 5-year forecast
of 3G base station roll out is presented.
3G mobile wireless
is the next evolutionary step in mobile wireless networks. 3G networks
will exploit the efficiency of packet switching to offer substantially
enhanced capacity, quality, and data rates, all of which will enable
the provision of advanced services seamlessly to the end-user.
Thus, 3G networks
will replace the existing circuit-switched mode of 2G networks with
all IP-based packet networks capable of efficiently and cost-effectively
supporting real-time video, high-speed multimedia, and mobile Internet
access. The two 3G technology standards that are being widely adopted
by network operators are:
- Wcdma (Wideband
Code Division Multiple Access). Etsi selected this technology in early
1998 as the European 3G standard for the evolution of GSM (initially
a French acronym for Groupe Speciale Mobile, and subsequently, for
Global System for Mobile Communications). Essentially, a Code Division
Multiple Access (Cdma) solution was selected over a Time Division
Multiple Access (Tdma) solution, even though GSM is based on Tdma,
because Cdma is recognized to offer conceptually greater capacity
than Tdma schemes. With Wcdma, users can expect to achieve data rates
of up to 2Mbps.
- Cdma2000 (Code
Division Multiple Access 2000). Supported by the CDG (Cdma Development
Group), this technology is being adopted by operators currently running
cdmaOne (IS-95A and IS-95B). Cdma2000 represents a series of technologies
requiring 1.25MHz to 5MHz of spectrum for both forward and reverse
links. The technology dramatically increases voice capacity. Speeds
are expected to range from 130Kbps to 2.4Mbps depending on the technology
deployed.
Wcdma, which is
the basis of Universal Mobile Telecommunications System (Umts), is
supported by the 3G Partnership Project (3GPP) and Cdma2000, is supported
by the 3G Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2). Of the five air interface
standards adopted by the ITU (International Telecommunications Union)
for terrestrial (non-satellite based) services for the International
Mobile Telecommunications - 2000 (Imt-2000) or 3G mobile wireless,
Wcdma and Cdma2000 are the clear leaders.
The basic requirements
for 3G systems are the support of voice, data, and multimedia services
in indoor, handheld and mobile environments.
The specified
transmission speeds for 3G mobile wireless are:
- 144Kbps at mobile
or vehicular speeds
- 384Kbps at pedestrian
speeds
- 2Mbps when stationary
Most incumbent
network operators are currently overlaying existing 2G networks with
next generation technologies.
- GSM to General
Packet Radio Service (Gprs) to Enhanced Data-rates for Gprs Evolution
(Edge), to eventual migration to Wcdma/Umts
- cdmaOne to Cdma2000
family of technologies
In examining the
evolution of 2G technologies to 3G, the report explores the options
for IS-136 Tdma operators. Tdma is a technology that has reached its
limits with little evolutionary possibility, and IS-136 network operators
are now faced with a choice of migrating their networks to either
GSM/Gprs/Edge/Umts or cdmaOne/Cdma2000. The analysis discusses the
pros and cons of evolving an IS-136 Tdma network towards GSM/Gprs/Edge/Umts
or cdmaOne/Cdma2000. The implications are presented from the points
of view of both the infrastructure and the handsets.
This report reviews
the cost implications of 3G deployment based on GSM/Gprs/Edge/Umts
or cdmaOne/Cdma2000 migration/upgrade paths at the different frequency
bands and recommends the strategies that network operators can adopt
to minimize the cost of rolling out 3G networks.
Findings of the
Study - The following are the major findings of the study:
- Globally, Wcdma/Umts
has about 53% of deployments/contracts versus 47% for Cdma2000.
- Europe-Russia
region has about 47% of the global 3G deployments/contracts, followed
by the North America and Asia-Pacific region
- Cdma2000 networks
have been rolling out faster worldwide than Wcdma/Umts networks.
- Ericsson is
the leader in global 3G (Cdma2000 and Wcdma/Umts) market share, followed
by Nortel Networks.
- When 2.5G technology
Gprs and Edge deployments are included in the analysis, Ericsson increases
its lead marginally but there is no change in the rankings.
- Lucent Technologies
is the world leader in Cdma2000 technology followed closely followed
by Nortel Networks
- Ericsson is
the top Wcdma/Umts infrastructure vendor followed by Nokia and Siemens/NEC.
- In terms of
regional market shares, Nortel Networks is the leader in North America
and Africa/Middle East, Nokia is the leader in Asia-Pacific, Lucent
is the leader in Caribbean and Latin America, Ericsson is the leader
in Europe/Russia.
- The North America
region has the highest number of Cdma2000 deployments/contracts, followed
by the Asia-Pacific region.
- The Europe-Russia
region has the highest number of Umts deployments/contracts, followed
by the Asia-Pacific region.
- By 2007, base
stations supporting 2.5/3G networks will number 1.8 million.
For more information
visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c3820