18
        
        
          Sphere
        
        
          3G T rends
        
        
          Sharing
        
        
          the
        
        
          benefits
        
        
          Forward-looking mobile and fixed-line telecom operators are turning to network sharing
        
        
          as a creative way to bring better services more economically to their customers
        
        
          
            By Jorge Felicidad
          
        
        
          With the expenses involved in building,
        
        
          upgrading, operating and maintaining telecommunications
        
        
          networks continuing to escalate over the past decade, it could
        
        
          only be a matter of time before carriers found more creative
        
        
          ways to fulfill their development agenda at lower cost.
        
        
          One of those ways has been the development of infra-
        
        
          structure-sharing arrangements implemented by a growing
        
        
          number of forward-looking mobile and fixed-line network
        
        
          operators.
        
        
          In a report, management consulting firm Booz Allen
        
        
          Hamilton said network sharing was first implemented in
        
        
          2001. “With the hype of 3G licensing in Europe and the big
        
        
          investments made in licence acquisition, many operators
        
        
          were under pressure to share deployment costs and thus
        
        
          share infrastructure,” Booz Allen Hamilton said.
        
        
          Anticipating the rapid growth of mobile internet data
        
        
          usage, operators
        
        
          
            3
          
        
        
          UK and T-Mobile pooled their 3G
        
        
          infrastructure in December 2001 in a 50-50 joint venture
        
        
          company called Mobile Broadband Network Ltd (MBNL).
        
        
          The purpose was to create Britain’s best 3G network more
        
        
          rapidly and more efficiently than either party could do alone.
        
        
          The resulting shared network requires fewer masts, consumes
        
        
          less energy and provides customers with superior mobile
        
        
          broadband service.
        
        
          MBNL awarded Nokia Siemens Networks a GBP400 mil-
        
        
          lion (USD600 million) contract that included the provision of
        
        
          3G radio network infrastructure, mobile network planning,
        
        
          implementation, optimisation and maintenance. The joint
        
        
          network infrastructure programme was slated for completion
        
        
          at the end of last year.
        
        
          “The growth in mobile broadband usage clearly provides
        
        
          challenges for networks,” Emin Gurdenli, technical director
        
        
          at T-Mobile UK, said. “These are challenges we have antici-
        
        
          pated.”
        
        
          In August 2004, Hutchison 3G Australia and Telstra Cor-
        
        
          poration committed to jointly own and operate a 2100-mega-
        
        
          hertz 3G network. Hutchison 3G later merged with Vodafone
        
        
          Australia to establish Vodafone Hutchison Australia (VHA).