US
: The CDMA Development Group (CDG) announced that more than 130 operators,
equipment vendors, government officials and press attended a workshop
titled, “IMT- MC Cellular Communications: Development Perspectives
in Russia,” co-organized by the CDG with the Third Generation
Telecommunication Networks Operators Association (3G Association)
(www.a3g.ru) and the International 450 Association (IA 450) (www.450world.org)
to discuss the progress and opportunities for CDMA2000® in Russia.
Representatives
from the Russian Ministry of Information Technology and Communications,
CDMA2000 and CDMA450 carriers, organizing associations and sponsors
Ericsson, Lucent Technologies, Nortel Networks and Qualcomm shared
their deployment experiences and provided insights into the outlook
for the Russian wireless market.
During the event,
the CDG signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the 3G Association
that calls for the two organizations to cooperate on the promotion
of CDMA2000 (IMT-MC) technology, networks and market development in
Russia.
“The demand
for wireless services in Russia is growing rapidly, offering great
potential for the CDMA community,” said Perry LaForge, executive
director of the CDG. “The commercial success of CDMA2000 worldwide
provides valuable insight into the opportunities of advanced wireless
technologies, and the CDG looks forward to working with the 3G Association
to share information and to promote CDMA2000 in Russia.”
The success of
CDMA450 was a major theme of the event. In his opening statement,
Nikolay Popov, Director of the Department of Public Programs at the
Ministry of Information Technology and Communications, stated that
CDMA450 technology has allowed Russia to modernize a large base of
analog systems and has significant potential and positive implications
for the future development of universal access in the country.
Four of the 12
commercial CDMA450 networks today are located in Russia, while two
more are about to be deployed and two others are conducting trials
in the country. Two leading Russian CDMA450 operators, Delta Telecom
and Moskovskaya Sotovaya Svyaz (MCC), shared their experiences at
the workshop.
Delta Telecom,
branded as SKYLINK in St. Petersburg, reported that its revenues have
increased 16 times since the introduction of CDMA450 and ARPU has
reached $68, compared to $10-15 for other operators in the market.
The carrier plans to launch CDMA2000 1xEV-DO service next year, offers
roaming with a number of CDMA450 operators in the region, and is testing
GSM inter-standard roaming.
MCC, also branded
as SKYLINK in Moscow, launched CDMA450 services last November. It
now covers 65 percent of the city’s population and offers voice,
SMS and Virtual Private Network services. The carrier is conducting
1xEV-DO trials, with a commercial launch of the higher-speed technology
pending. MCC currently has roaming in place with SKYLINK in St. Petersburg,
Diallog in Belarus and KCC in Kuzbass. Additional roaming roll-outs
are planned for the Tyumen and Bashkortostan regions of Russia, Latvia
and Kazakhstan.
In addition to
the Russian carriers, two other CDMA2000 operators from the region
presented at the workshop. Eurotel from the Czech Republic launched
CDMA2000 1xEV-DO, branded Data Express, in August 2004, the first
CDMA2000 1xEV-DO network in Europe and the first 1xEV-DO system at
450 MHz. The service, which offers high-speed access to the Internet,
has been a tremendous success: in two months, it captured 10 percent
of the broadband market in the country. Altel is in the second phase
of deploying CDMA2000 1X at 800 MHz in Uzbekistan and is evaluating
a trial of CDMA2000 1xEV-DO as well as CDMA450.
“As the
attendance at the workshop demonstrates, there is great interest in
new wireless technologies and the opportunities they create for the
Russian market,” said Alexander Krupnov, president of the 3G
Association. “This workshop was our first event focusing on
IMT-MC, and we look forward to working with the CDG on future events.”
About CDMA2000:
100 Million & Growing
There are more
than 124 million people across all continents using CDMA2000 technologies.
97 operators in 46 countries worldwide offer CDMA2000 services, and
36 more will launch in the coming months. More than 680 CDMA2000 devices
have been introduced to the market. CDMA2000 1xEV-DO is leading in
the deployment of 3G broadband networks worldwide, with 13 commercial
networks, 18 additional systems to be deployed this year. There are
87 models of 1xEV-DO devices commercially available today.