MTN to build rural broadband network

This article was posted by on Aug 19th, 2010 and filed under News, Top. You can follow any responses to this entry using RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

Sameer Dave

MTN SA plans to build a third-generation (3G) mobile network to offer wireless broadband to consumers in outlying areas. It will build the 3G network at 900MHz.

TechCentral has learnt that MTN expects significant growth in demand for broadband services outside SA’s cities over the next few years and so is keen to boost its 3G coverage in these areas.

Building its network at 900MHz is particularly important as it will allow MTN to provide wider coverage with fewer base stations, reducing costs, and making it feasible to deliver broadband in areas where it wasn’t possible before.

Until now, SA’s two big mobile network operators, MTN and Vodacom, have used the higher-frequency 2,1GHz band, which offers a smaller footprint around towers.

It’s not immediately clear how much MTN plans to spend on expanding its 3G network. Its capital expenditure in the first six months of 2010 amounted to R1bn, a sharp reduction from the R3bn it spent in the comparable period in 2009.

MTN SA chief technology officer Sameer Dave says the company is planning to “refarm” a portion of its 900MHz spectrum, used for second-generation (2G — mainly voice), for 3G. It will only refarm this spectrum outside the cities; 900MHz will continue to be used exclusively for 2G in urban areas.

MTN is not the first SA operator to consider refarming its 900MHz spectrum. Cell C is building its new 3G network at 900MHz, too, and the company regards the lower frequency as a key competitive advantage. And Vodacom is running a small pilot in a remote part of the country to test the feasibility of refarming some of its spectrum.

Dave says MTN has concluded a detailed test, involving 20 base stations in Limpopo province, and has proved the technology delivers a 30% increase in coverage over 3G at 2,1GHz.

Once the company begins deploying the network — and it will be done on a region-by-region basis — then he expects MTN’s 3G coverage to expand dramatically. At the moment, MTN covers 48% of the SA population with its 3G network.

“There’s a big market in the rural areas for broadband,” Dave says. “The bulk of our broadband customers will eventually come from those areas.”

The poor penetration of Telkom’s broadband digital subscriber lines outside the cities will also propel growth, Dave says.

He concedes, however, that backhaul networks — the links that connect its base stations to its core network — could prove the biggest challenge in creating broadband coverage in outlying areas.

For now, many of the new 3G towers will have to be connected using microwave equipment. This is a challenge, especially for towers that are located far from cities — and many of them are far away because of the country’s large geographic area.

Ultimately, though, Dave says he hopes high-speed fibre will be deployed to most of the base stations.

“Our plan is to start by linking communities that are closer to the cities, rather than those that are completely in the hinterland,” he says.  — Duncan McLeod, TechCentral



  • dominic

    Excellent. Now Sentech won’t need to do it…..

  • Gareth McClure

    Its all good that Mtn laying its 3G network outside the metro cities there just one problem how are the people who cannot afford to buy a desktop never mind owning a dongle the internet is just far too expensive for the working class where will the people who just about make it to buy bread use internet.I know to build a network cost money it just do not make sense what they gonna do unless I missed something?

  • Marc

    The “news” section of techcentral only has articles about MTN.
    Is this site sponsored by MTN or are MTN the only ‘tech’ company in South Africa that publicizes its activities?

  • http://www.techcentral.co.za Editor

    @Marc: Yesterday was MTN’s results day. Expect similar saturation coverage when the likes of Vodacom and Telkom report

  • dzasta2010

    @Gareth
    I live in a place called Nquthu (I doubt you’ve ever heard of it). It is about 40km from Nkandla and 70km from Vryheid. It is regarded as rural but and the population is 99.9% black (+-200,000) on average 8 members per family i.e. (25,000 families).
    I can assure you that at least 30% of the families in the area have a computer or a laptop and 100% of those families have at least 2 cellphones per home, if not more, and they do buy airtime. This area has over 150 schools and most of these schools have a computer lan of some sort.

    I find it disturbing that a lot of city folk, both black and white but esp. white still believe that people in rural areas just exist to buy bread. We’ve been neglected for too long and we’re not as poor as we’ve been made out to be. We are hungry, but more hungry for knowledge than for food, and with most KZN families in the rural areas there usually is someone working in the city (where did you think all those darkies come from) who still manages to send money home to subsidize here or there. So please don’t fool yourself into thinking that 3G or broadband is a luxury for the chosen few, it is a necessity for all.

    We’ve been sidelined for too long. It’s about time, we’re tired of slow EDGE from MTN and CELL C (to Vodacom it’s almost like we don’t exist – GPRS).

  • Gareth McClure

    I am neither black nor white there are rural areas that do not even have lights,water or toilets I rather have the basics sent out to the poor than setting up an expensive tower 1 person would use towers are not toilet paper somebody will pay for it. There needs to be a assessment done before laying out cables or hardware please try and not label me racist as I have being in many townships and my father lives on a farm in rural areas phone calls play a major role not internet.

  • noah

    @gareth – if you build it they will come

Advertisement

Recent Comments

  • Theunis De Klerk: I have started replacing my downlights with LED ones. Started with the Osram ones, but at R200, too...
  • Greg Mahlknecht: Great, thanks – Makro’s a bit far away from me, but I see ACDC is just a few mins away,...
  • Wayne Gemmell: I bought a simple LED globe to replace a globe in my lounge. The thing was so dim that I eventually...
  • Jsteffen: Yes Simphiwe, the are called “cheapies” – the phone is on contract, which means that they...
  • Jsteffen: Yeah, and the adults who “own” it, doesn’t have a clue how to use all of the features, as...

Advertisement
Advertisement

TechCentral is proudly hosted by:




Log in / (c) 2009 - 2012 NewsCentral Media