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BT Goes With Huawei for FTTH

BT Group plc (NYSE: BT; London: BTA) announced a fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) deployment at a new housing development in Southeast England today, claiming its access network offshoot, Openreach , will be able to provide access speeds of up to 100 Mbit/s to end users, with technology from Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd.

The new development is at Ebbsfleet Valley in the English county of Kent, where, during the next 25 years, about 10,000 homes will be built. The first homes will be built and hooked up in August.

Openreach is building a fiber access network using GPON equipment from Huawei, which is already an access and optical equipment supplier for BT's £10 billion (US$19.6 billion) 21CN next-generation network project. Huawei launched its GPON platform in 2006. (See BT Unveils 21CN Suppliers, Vendors Sign BT 21CN Contracts, BT's 21CN Deals: Booty or Bloody? , and Huawei Launches FTTx Products.)

Once built, Openreach plans to offer a wholesale access product, called Generic Access Ethernet (GAE, totally), to the U.K.'s service providers (including BT's retail business), comprising 10 Mbit/s downstream and 2 Mbit/s upstream.

While it may seem somewhat counterproductive to build a fiber access network to offer only 10-Mbit/s access, the carrier says that service providers taking capacity on the network will be able to buy two higher-speed products from Openreach -- one that offers up to 30-Mbit/s access, and one that offers up to 100 Mbit/s, though both of those speeds are peak rates, and not guaranteed.

No financial details, about pricing or the capital cost of the deployment, were available.

And for BT, the deployment is as much a fact-finding mission as anything else.

"This is really a test bed," notes a BT spokesman. "The best way to find out how this all works is to do it. That's how we'll find out what services are used, what speeds people want, which service providers are interested in the [wholesale] service. We'll learn plenty from this."

Heavy Reading chief analyst Graham Finnie says this is a "great win for Huawei," but notes that GPON technology, where fiber connections are shared by multiple end users, is perhaps not the most suitable technology option for such open access networks, where wholesale access to multiple service providers is planned.

Finnie notes that "it's much easier to build an open-access network with active Ethernet technology," where each end user is connected with a dedicated fiber connection, hence enabling dedicated (not best effort) broadband speeds of 100 Mbit/s downstream and 50 Mbit/s upstream.

That hasn't stopped GPON's most vocal supporters from touting the passive access technology as being very suitable for wholesale activities -- Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU) already has its GPON gear deployed by network operators, such as Swedish utility firm Jönköping Energi, that are offering wholesale access. (See Alcatel-Lucent Wins GPON Deal.)

Finnie also notes that BT's base-rate broadband offer of 10 Mbit/s is "very disappointing," especially compared with the much higher, dedicated fiber access speeds being offered just across the Channel in France. (See Iliad Gets Active With FTTH and Neuf Launches 50-Mbit/s FTTx.)

The Heavy Reading analyst adds that French regulator ARCEP is currently grappling with the regulatory challenges of competitive access to fiber access networks, and deciding exactly how and where in the physical network competitive access should be enabled. (See FT Wants Open Ducts.)

No change to BT's FTTH policy
BT stresses that the Ebbsfleet deployment doesn't herald the start of an FTTH revolution in the U.K., and that its access network strategy hasn't changed.

BT has been saying for some time now that fiber access, or Next Generation Access (NGA) as it also calls it, makes economic sense in greenfield sites, where new access infrastructure needs to be laid.

Where it already has copper access lines, though, the carrier maintains that it's uneconomical to replace that infrastructure with fiber because of the upfront costs. "There would be no guaranteed payback. We couldn't go to our shareholders with that sort of proposition," says a spokesman.

"But we are committed to looking at how a fiber upgrade of the existing network could be done if the economic case got better. But with new builds it absolutely makes sense to install a fiber access network," he adds.

So BT is looking at the possibility of deploying FTTH in all new housing projects, which, if the current U.K. government's plans are executed, could see the construction of 3 million new homes during the next 12 years.

That would require a change in the current regulations, though. The U.K.'s current telecom rules are based around BT offering wholesale services over copper infrastructure. The carrier says it has been awarded special exemption by U.K. regulator Office of Communications (Ofcom) for the Ebbsfleet rollout.

For further FTTH deployments, "Ofcom would need to update the regulations," something that's being discussed at the moment with BT and the U.K.'s competitive operators. (See Ofcom Checks Out B'band.)

In the meantime, BT is upgrading its DSL broadband base to ADSL2+, and plans to introduce broadband services of up to 24 Mbit/s during the first half of this year.

— Ray Le Maistre, International News Editor, Light Reading

Newest Comments First       Display in Chronological Order
OSXman
User Ranking
Monday January 14, 2008 2:38:02 PM
no ratings
What are you hearing on 21CN Huawei MSANs?
bollocks187
User Ranking
Friday January 11, 2008 10:04:38 PM
You right....even 21cn was old fashioned. They will be decades behind other carriers. It's not enough they rip off the public/business by charging for local calls they cannot even offer quality broadband service.....a sign of a true monopolistic company.


Ray Le Maistre
User Ranking
Friday January 11, 2008 11:35:56 AM
no ratings
I can't help thinking that comparing 2008 with the mid 1990s might not be appropriate... fiber access technology has moved on a bit since then, as it has since 2006.

Not to say that this will be a success just because the technology has advanced, but...

Whatever BT does, the U.K. is going to be years, maybe decades, behind France. Now, THAT'S a broadband economy.

Ray
Petabit
User Ranking
Friday January 11, 2008 5:15:31 AM
Graham Finnie says this is a "great win for Huawei,", well no, not really.

BT has had a long affair with fibre access, doing trials from the mid 80s. They tried PON in the mid 90s in Milton Keynes. This went so well that they had to overlay the network with copper to get high speed internet access.

I think this will be their fifth PON trial (the last one being long lines in the Cherry Hinton area of Cambridge in 2006), and probably their tenth fibre access trial.

P.
bollocks187
User Ranking
Thursday January 10, 2008 10:20:35 PM
What BT and UK customers need is a real competitor to BT for local access.

A monopolistic carrier that is way behind in technology deployments.

Wow 10mbps to the home how exciting BT. So much for the 21CN optical access vision - duh ?
Stefan Sip
User Ranking
Thursday January 10, 2008 3:57:24 PM
no ratings
I see that Huawei has a banner ad on LR. Next time they renew their contract, you should say to them, "Huawei, NOT AGAIN"
zwixard
User Ranking
Thursday January 10, 2008 2:49:36 PM
They will be happy to spare 2 engineers and work on the coffee dispenser if it can enhance customer experience.
Ray Le Maistre
User Ranking
Thursday January 10, 2008 2:12:45 PM
no ratings
Wonder if BT's staff canteen coffee dispenser is supplied by Huawei? :-)
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