Data traffic is surging on many mobile networks as a result of mobile broadband sales and the iPhone phenomenon. But operators urgently need to deal with the resulting backhaul crunch, by offloading data traffic onto WiFi hotspots and femtocells and by finding economical ways to expand capacity at macrocell and microcell sites, says Philip Bates, Senior Manager at Analysys Mason.
Bates, who will be speaking at the Mobile World Congress today on this issue, says that most operators have indicated that they intend to expand their capacity by moving from circuit-based to packet-based backhaul. At the same time there are increasing commercial and regulatory pressures on operators to share sites. "We believe that this combination of factors creates a unique opportunity for incumbent fixed-line operators and their altnet competitors to offer shared packet-based backhaul services," explains Bates.
He adds: "Backhaul-on-demand, as we call it, can be a win-win situation for both the buyer and the seller. Mobile operators eliminate the risk of over- or under-dimensioning their backhaul networks as a result of errors in forecasting future levels of data traffic, avoid the capital expenditure associated with a move to packet-based backhaul, and safeguard their quality of service at shared sites by means of a service level agreement with the backhaul provider. Meanwhile, backhaul providers secure large, long-term revenue opportunities, and can mitigate the traffic forecasting risk to some extent through their ability to aggregate the traffic from multiple operators at low incremental cost."
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