Interesting numbers on costs of installation of some last mile alternatives, about half-way down:
americasnetwork.com
CANARIE migration Canada is seriously considering becoming the first country to deploy fiber to the home.
By Annie Lindstrom
Perhaps the best way to meet the bandwidth needs of the masses is to build a new fiber optic network to each and every home. To many, that proposition sounds preposterous; to a small, yet growing number of people, it has the ring of truth that cannot be denied.
In a day and age when efforts are set on maximizing copper and embedded plant, Bill St. Arnaud has restored the notion of bringing fiber to the home (FTTH). St. Arnaud is senior director of network projects for the Canadian Network for the Advancement of Research Industry and Education Inc. (CANARIE; Ottawa, Ont., Canada).
St. Arnaud's paper, entitled "Gigabit Internet to Every Canadian Home 2005," appeared on CANARIE's Web site earlier this year. Since its appearance, building a divergent, rather than convergent, third network has become a topic of serious discussion in Canada and has sparked keen interest in the idea in the U.S., especially in Washington, D.C.
It is St. Arnaud's contention that digital subscriber line (DSL) technology and cable modems are fundamentally flawed solutions for providing business and residential customers with high-bandwidth network access. First, neither cable modems nor DSL can serve each and every customer who wants them. Second, they are not future proof. That's because they don't scale to provide customers with the bandwidth they will need and desire once they get a taste of their first megabit. In short, St. Arnaud says that service providers might as well spend the money they are spending to extend DSL's reach on deploying FTTH, a technology that will last further into the future than either cable modems or DSL.
"One-third of the world's cable modems are deployed here in Canada. At some point in the future, DSL and cable modems are going to run out of gas and we are going to need FTTH. We should start thinking about that day now," St. Arnaud says.
Not another nightmare In the U.S., FTTH conjures up images of Time Warner's infamous Orlando trial and dollar signs spinning quickly down a drain. However, the gigabit Internet to the home (GITH) network St. Arnaud proposes will cost far, far less, he says. That's because it will serve only one master — the Internet (at least initially).
Customers would continue to meet their voice and video needs using existing telco and cableco networks until those services could be migrated cost effectively onto the GITH network. The other major difference between the existing networks and the GITH network is that the GITH will not belong to the service providers themselves. A wholesaler/operator of some kind will provide competitive open access to the fiber, or wavelengths, that reach into the home to the service provider of the customer's choice.
St. Arnaud believes that making FTTH a reality likely will require some degree of government involvement. He envisions municipalities as providers of the funding, as well as being wholesalers of the access. He points to Canberra, Australia, where the city is building fiber out to people's homes and opening it up to service providers who gain access to the network at the central office.
State governments deployed statewide fiber optic networks in the 1990s. Municipalities have already begun, and will continue, to install citywide networks well into the new millennium. However, most of the cities that have already begun such projects, including Spokane, Wash. and Palo Alto, Calif., are talking about delivering integrated services (voice, video, data and Internet access) over their networks. St. Arnaud believes they should instead focus their efforts on providing the only clearly market-driven service to date — Internet access.
In North America, fiber itself is closer than many people think. Chicago, for instance, already has three fiber optic networks in place — one for 911, one for its streetlights and another for its transportation system, St. Arnaud says. But trials won't be limited to urban areas.
"Some rural communities are in better shape in terms of their ability to organize themselves and deploy the fiber," he notes.
Canadian government officials and CANARIE (itself a government-funded, nonprofit organization) could make an announcement regarding GITH pilot programs later this year or early next year, according to St. Arnaud. The pilot programs will test some of the concepts spelled out in the discussion paper and it's likely that they would be launched in each province, he adds.
"With the pilots, we'll work with equipment suppliers to define architectures that allow competitive equal access to the doorstep in selected communities and work on proving the business case," St. Arnaud says.
Nowhere to run, nowhere to hide Although Canada's telephone companies are not 100% enthusiastic about the GITH effort, they are "not close-minded about it," St. Arnaud says.
"There is recognition among them that maybe DSL is not going to get them all the way to the goal line. DSL doesn't get to all homes, and if someone helps them up front with the investment in the fiber, they'd consider simply operating and managing it in a competitive access situation," he adds.
According to the paper, cost studies are compelling as well. Unlike past FTTH visions, the GITH network does not have to deliver legacy services. It also saves on costs because it can aggregate traffic locally via what St. Arnaud has dubbed a "neighborhood routing puck."
While past studies have set the cost of delivering FTTH at $1,500 to $3,000 per subscriber, GITH is estimated to cost between $900 and $1,000 per subscriber. That's not much more than the $600 to $900 cost of installing a cable television (CATV) connection. The GITH cost is actually on par with the $900 to $1200 cost of installing a residential phone line and less than a hybrid fiber coax (HFC) connection, which costs between $1200 to $1500 per subscriber, according to the paper (Figure 1).
"DSL systems have a capital cost of $500 per subscriber, but DSL and cable modems have a short life cycle due to the rapid obsolescence of the technology," the paper says. In contrast, the major components of the GITH system can be amortized over a period of 20 to 30 years.
Although a "considerable amount of research and development" will be needed to define the appropriate GITH architecture, "wide-scale, economical deployment of GITH is possible within the next three years," by tailoring attributes of existing optical Internet backbone networks such as CANARIE's CA*net 3, St. Arnaud states.
Instead of a gigaPOP, a neighborhood competitive access interconnection point (NCAIP) could provide end users with simultaneous access to multiple service providers (Figure 2). There might be competitive NCAIPs and the customer would have independent connections to different NCAIPs. Dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) could be augmented by access technologies such as passive optical networking (PON), shared gigabit Ethernet coax, wireless access and dedicated FTTH.
Additionally, high-performance routers in gigaPOPs would be replaced with chip-based routing pucks in the neighborhood service pedestal. The routing puck is a combination of a Layer 2 switch and a Layer 4 logical switched router that links to a PON at the customer premises on the line side and to other routing pucks or the transport network on the network side. It will support simple, high-speed forwarding at Layer 2 and allow a subscriber to be part of separate address spaces of different service providers by supporting logical switched paths between the subscriber and a competitive access service provider, the paper explains. The paths could map to a single fiber, a wavelength or a virtual path.
Roadblocks Just how soon the mass market will need more than a megabit of bandwidth is difficult to say but there are some applications waiting in the wings for more bandwidth today. Those applications include digital video image transport, mega-e-mail attachment transport, DWDM caching and multimedia push and always-on applications.
Building a third network for purposes of reaching the Internet may sound like a very good idea on paper, but there are technical and social hurdles to jump before GITH can become a reality in Canada or the U.S. Those hurdles include considerable inertia in the form of existing service providers who will see that network as a serious threat to their futures. Also, there will be a need to gain regulatory support and drum up local government interest in funding a network of which it will not be the sole benefactor. Then there's the issue of selecting a wholesaler and determining how many and which competitive access providers may gain access to the routing pucks.
At the end of his paper, St. Arnaud points out that the great infrastructure deployments of the 20th century required a strong partnership between industry and government. But the GITH network, which is premised on competitive equal access, will require the defining of a new set of relationships between industry and government, he says. Building that new bridge would seem to be the most important piece of architecture that needs to be built and it must be done well before the first fiber in the GITH network is installed. |