28 Jul 2006
Carrier Ethernet services are poised to expand across Europe fuelled by operator network migrations, enterprise demand and the inherent benefits of the networking technology, industry experts predict.
Frost & Sullivan noted that carrier Ethernet services in Europe generated revenues of $1.1bn in 2005 and will reach nearly $5bn in 2012.
Some applications will take off later rather than sooner, but will generate a surge in demand for Ethernet services later in the product cycle.
"Bandwidth intensive applications, the introduction of new services and the need to reduce costs are creating a move from traditional bandwidth-limited telecom services to technologies such as Ethernet," said Frost & Sullivan research analyst Fernando Elizalde.
"End users are requiring services that are more flexible and scalable hence generating savings by contracting what they actually need."
Carrier Ethernet services in the metropolitan space are becoming increasingly popular as the technology evolves and becomes standardised, according to the Frost & Sullivan report.
The deployment of services such as triple-play is creating a demand for Ethernet services in the metropolitan space for aggregation of data and transport in the backbone.
Furthermore, with the launch of third-generation mobile services, mobile data usage is expected to surge along with wireless backhaul traffic which is currently transported over connections averaging 2Mbps.
"Out of a need to achieve cost efficiencies and augment service offerings, operators are migrating their networks to next-generation infrastructures based on IP and Ethernet," said Elizalde.
"Consequently, legacy services will be phased out and Ethernet will be replacing layer 2 services."
However, the analyst warned that customer awareness is being affected by the limited footprint of these services.
Few pan-European operators have a consistent offering across Europe, while national operators have been introducing long-haul services only in the recent past.
"There are still standardisation issues to overcome," said Elizalde. "The lack of interoperability testing until the end of 2005 obstructed the possibility of extending carrier Ethernet services on an end-to-end basis when several carriers were involved."
Latest stories from Wireless
Related videos
Related articles
Related jobs
Poll
Are you confident that the UK's IT infrastructure is secure from attack in the wake of the Flame malware revelations?
Orange and Intel talk us through the ins and outs of their San Diego smartphone
Connect with V3.co.uk
Social networking is almost ubiquitous. This white paper examines the benefits and risks and it looks at the different ways companies can reconcile them
The importance of understanding your infrastructure
Development Manager / PHP Developer / MySQL / LAMP...
Process Expert for Information/Content Management...
SQL Server / SSIS / ETL / T-SQL Data Migration A...
Linux Systems Administrator / Linux CentOS / Network...
Keep up to date with the latest products, services and technologies from the world's leading IT companies. IThound.com brings you over 2,000 white papers, case studies and analyst reports.
Do you agree?