March 5, 2010

Research and Action Agenda for a National Broadband Initiative Workshop.

Website: National Broadband Initiative

Event Report: National Broadband Initiative workshop report


Event Description:

Recognizing the positive effects of broadband on economic growth, several developed countries have not only focused on policy measures to accelerate growth and penetration of broadband, but have also included it as an area for fiscal stimulus. However, increasing gap between developing and developed countries, not only in terms of mobile coverage but also in terms of broadband penetration indicates an increasing gap in potential for economic growth. Further, within these countries there is a huge disparity between the metros, urban and rural areas. Increasing gaps in broadband deployment are seen as gaps in competitiveness of economies, and therefore, it is vitally important for India to develop a national agenda for broadband deployment.

This is an initiative by IITCOE for all stakeholders including the DoT, TRAI, DIT, private operator, Indian Railways/RailTel/Infrastructure Providers, other government user agencies such as the Planning Commission, academic institutions, industry and others to develop a research agenda and an action plan for broadband deployment in the country. A dialogue between the policymakers and the researchers is necessary to develop the outline of a medium term action plan and a policy research agenda, covering identified current and future issues which will require further work.


Topics to be discussed:

1) Experience of Other Countries
2) Technological Developments
3) Demand Factors
4) State Level Factors
5) Addressing the Needs of Rural, Semi urban, Low Ability to Pay Customers

Organizers:

1) IIM Ahmedabad Idea Telecom Centre of Excellence (IITCOE)
2) Indian Council for Research in International Economic Relations (ICRIER)


Objective:

This is a call to all interested stakeholders including the DoT, TRAI, DIT, other government agencies such as the Planning Commission, academic institutions, industry and others to develop a research agenda and an action plan for broadband deployment in the country. A dialogue between the policymakers and the researchers is necessary to develop the outline of a medium term action plan and a policy research agenda, covering identified current and future issues which will require further work.

4 comments:

  1. This should be a knowledge intensive workshop

    ReplyDelete
  2. Surely it was very focussed discussion.

    One of the takeaways was the definition of Broadband as defined by Dr Robert Pepper of Cisco.

    This definition included along with download, upload and latency values. Upload, download are understandable as going up.

    Latency value is the new parameter. For latency values, he indicated 90 msec for the present and 60 msec for the future.

    Would request help for the technical explanation to show as benefit to the internet user when latency comes down to 90msec and later to 60 msec.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The FCC has recently announced a plan to change the way it treats the last mile internet access from an information to a telecommunication service. This will mean that it will be regulated as common carriage which means that they i)cannot discriminate against carrying any kind of traffic, ii) need to contribute towards rural services fund and iii) agree with the FCC on their charges.

    The Economist (http://www.economist.com/business-finance/economics-focus/displaystory.cfm?story_id=16106593&CFID=133862844&CFTOKEN=18402581) has an interesting perspective relating this plan to the common carriage regulation of railways, old time highway inns and cargo ships. Read on.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hello all,

    This is with reference to the following initative in the US for
    broadband spectrum allocation.

    We have been talking about 700 MHz for commercial mobile services for
    a long time; Mobile TV recommendations by TRAI in Aug 2008 on
    earmarking of UHF Band V (from 585 MHz – 806 MHz) for terrestrial mode
    of mobile television transmission has been put in the back burner.

    The moot question is: Is spectrum scarce as we perceive it to be??

    With Head-End in the Sky (HITS), the government should initate
    widespread deployment of digital transmission and release frequencies
    in the UHF band being used for terrestrrial TV transission for
    commertcial mobile broadband services.

    ========================
    Broadband Availability to Expand
    New York Times (06/27/10) Wyatt, Edward

    U.S. President Barack Obama today will sign a memorandum that makes
    500 megahertz of wireless spectrum, currently controlled by the
    federal government and private companies, available for auction. The
    memorandum is part of an administration effort to nearly double the
    wireless communications spectrum available for commercial use over the
    next 10 years. Most of the spectrum would be designated for commercial
    use in mobile broadband and similar applications, and proceeds from
    the auction would help finance better communications systems for
    public safety agencies. About 45 percent of the spectrum to be
    auctioned will come from federal agencies that will be asked to give
    up allocations that they are not using or could share. The remaining
    spectrum will come from unused spectrum already scheduled for auction
    or from broadcasters who would be offered incentives to relinquish
    part of their airwaves. "The administration's strong actions on
    wireless broadband will move us significantly toward sustainable
    economic success, robust investment, and global leadership in
    innovation," says Federal Communications Commission chairman Julius
    Genachowski.

    For details, refer to: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/28/technology/28broadband.html

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for your comment.. We will review your comment and approve very shortly..