Title: Transtel
1Transtel
- Prepared for the Parliamentary
- Portfolio Committee on Communications
2Outline
- Introduction to Transtel
- Transtel present and future
- Progress towards the SNO
- Convergence in communications
- Towards the Information Society
3Transtel overview
- Largest private telecommunications network
operator (PTN) in the Southern hemisphere - Annual revenue of more than R 700m
(70 internal to Transnet, 30 external) - Country-wide digital transmission network
(8000 km optical fibre 14000 km microwave) - Existing customer base
- Voice 132 exchanges 65 000 ports 140m calls
per annum - Data 67 nodes 3420 ports 3700 point-to-point
services - 12 000 mobile radio terminals (230 high sites)
- Project management / installation experience
- Installed 3000 sites for MTN, 900 for National
Lottery - Satellite customers in 17 African countries
- Over 1 400 employees in 140 places
Transtel depots South Africa
4Transtel customers
- Transnet All divisions and subsidiaries
- Other customers in South Africa including
- SITA (State Information Telecommunications
Authority) - SITA Inc
- arivia.kom
- SA Post Office
- DTI
- MTN
- ACSA (Airports Company of South Africa)
- Eskom
- International Customers, predominantly in Africa
- Include banks, retail stores, educational
institutions and other public
telecommunications companies
5Transtels position
- Transtel exists as the result of a Private
Telecommunications Network licence that allows
Transnet to have its own networks - In a de-regulated market, a PTN can no longer
compete in generic telecoms services - Transtels Enterprise Voice/Data, and
International services will migrate out of
Transnet into a public operator (SNO) - Transtels safety-critical Transport Telecoms
will remain within Transnet
6Transport telecoms services
- Basic transmission/access copper
- Dedicated rail fibre transmission
- Train radio systems Various
- Common bearer infrastructure
- Other mission critical
- Shared use of trunked radio
- Port control/operations, containers
7Enterprise telecoms services
- PABXs and voice services
- Audio and video conferencing
- Leased lines (Transmission)
- Frame relay supporting IP services
- Ethernet/IP Virtual Private Networks
- Internet access provision
- Broadband wireless access
- Broadband copper access (xDSL)
8Enterprise telecoms Future
Customers
Transtel Data
Transtel Voice
Converged Voice, Data, Internet
Telkom
SNO
Transtel services are delivered on dedicated
Voice and Data networks
The SNO will give customers access to a range of
new, converged services
The SNO will provide a resilient new backbone,
and be an alternative to Telkom for public
telecoms traffic
9Transtel International (Satellite)
10Transtel satellite in Africa
Active
Opportunities
Unexploited
11Project Services - Achievements
- Full Services Network Transtel and Eskom
- Joint deployment of national optical fibre
network and equipment - Digital transmission networks for railways
- Ore line 800 km digital microwave from Saldanha
to Sishen - Coal line 500 km optical fibre cable installed
at 4 km per day - Installation of Radio Base Stations for MTN
- 2142 sites out of 3200 built up in MTNs first
five years - Have won new contracts for deployment in specific
regions - Installation of LANs for SAA/Galileo
- 900 LANs installed in 24 months
- SA National Lottery
- 500 VSATs installed in the first 20 days
12New opportunities
- Provision of basic PTN services to VANS
- Provision of VoIP through VANS licence
- Expansion of international services
- Provisos
- Spare PTN capacity available to the market is
currently very limited scaled for Transnet - Capital-intensive nature of telecoms limits
opportunities whilst within Transnet
13The reasons for an SNO remain
- Essential large scale facilities competition
- Telecoms value chain is dependent on basic
facilities - A choice of wholesale supplier and price is
critical - A player to challenge Telkom on equal footing
- Licence, regulatory, tackle anti-competitive
practice - A large, viable infrastructure investment plan
- Access to the only other national backbone
- Cheaper facilities over existing rights-of-way
- Brings the alternative infrastructure to the
market - A new competitive provider in the market
- An environment for partnership and sharing
14Progress made towards the SNO
- Eight years of legislative and regulatory
preparation for a second operator - Telecommunications Act and Amendments
- Drafting of multiple regulations by ICASA
- Three years of network implementation by Transtel
and Eskom Enterprises - Alignment of business plans between identified
shareholders - Preparation of draft licence conditions
- Work with market, partners and customers
15Convergence and legislation
- Convergence probably a misnomer real issue is
market structure. - Convergence need not be legislated it is
happening despite legislation. - The creation of universal, fixed mobile
licences is good, but radical - Any new legislation must
- Have a sound basis in the principles of
telecommunications regulation - Control players with Significant Market Power,
and essential facilities - Not remove, but replace regulations with
appropriate new regulations - Encourage and promote the deployment of
telecommunications facilities - Deal with issue of Local Loop Unbundling of the
incumbents copper lines - Deal effectively with transition of existing
licences, to ensure continuity - Apply light touch regulation to services and
application (class) licences - Direct funding of the regulator by licence fees
remains the ideal. - Some concerns about the policy framework, which
has not been fully articulated to guide the
legislature in finalising new legislation. - Without broadband, there is no convergence.
However, there is no published broadband policy
for South Africa, or any mechanism proposed for
the setting of targets broadband access rollout.
16Spectrum and facilities
- Giving extensive rights to a large number of
facilities-based (network service) operators on
application, has the potential to create
environmental chaos. Other countries do not
typically give many players such rights. - Certain frequency bands may require a particular
minimum allocation to build a viable business
similarly, there may be an optimum number of
players for a viable, competitive market (e.g.
3G). - Licence fees obviously need to be proportional to
the value of spectrum allocated or facilities
rights secured in a licence. - The number of facilities-based (individual)
licences needs to be limited - To ensure a predictable environment for
infrastructure investments - To ensure efficient and appropriate use of the
frequency spectrum - To provide for control of rights of way and other
environmental issues
17Convergence Mobile and Fixed Wireless
18CDMA2000 technology trial
- Transtel has assisted in putting together a trial
of CDMA2000 (3G mobile) technology in South
Africa. - The trial is led by Qualcomm, the inventors of
CDMA, in partnership with Ericsson (South
Africa), MTN, Transtel, the CSIR, and Wits
University. - Trial supports an 800 MHz sharing study by ICASA.
- The trial will demonstrate the following
- Use of upper 800MHz band without impacting
broadcasting - Use of CDMA2000 for fixed-mobile and full mobile
services - Highest capacity, lowest cost per subcriber for
voice services - Very high speed data (EVDO), up to 2 Mbits/s
- Full roaming onto GSM infrastructure (dual-band
phones) - Applications including e-learning, telemedicine,
Internet - ICASA has issued the temporary frequency licence
- Trial will take place through February and March
19SNO key success factors
- A clear, consistent policy timeline for the
duration of the SNO business plan - Proportional rights and obligations for
facilities-based operators, now and under new
legislation - Regulatory controls on players with Significant
Market Power (currently three) - Carrier preselection (immediate) and number
portability (during 2005) as required by the 2001
Act - Access to additional appropriate fixed-mobile
frequency spectrum (e.g. 800 MHz, 450 MHz) - Access to international optical fibre routes at
cost (level playing field for competition) - Community Service Obligations and rollout targets
aligned to broadband convergent access needs - Ideal Access to Telkom copper Local Loop (Shared)
20The new digital divide
- Mobile teledensity has overtaken fixed
teledensity as the measure of access to
telephony, but this is no longer the real issue - Only a tiny fraction of the worlds 100 million
broadband connections are in Africa - Digital divide is no longer about telephones, but
about access to the Information Society - World Summit on the Information Society 2003
recognised the need for broadband
21Broadband and convergence
Voice
Converged (IP) Network
Multi-service Connection!
Data
Internet
22Broadband and Internet Global
700 -- 600 -- 500 -- 400 -- 300 -- 200 -- 100
-- 0 --
10.7
7.4
4.0
Broadband as of Internet users
1.4
0.3
0
0
0
1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
2001 2002
Internet
Broadband
Source ITU Internet report Birth of Broadband
23Broadband policy for South Africa
- South Africa needs broadband
- True broadband 1 Mbit/s or more
- Both for consumers and businesses
- Mobile (3G) has a role, but different
- Backbone and international bandwidth
- Need a proper wholesale market
- Bitstream (wholesale DSL)
- Shared access (proposed by ICASA)
- Local Loop Unbundling
24The Information Society
- An enabling environment at national and
international levels is essential for the
Information Society The rule of law,
accompanied by a supportive, transparent,
pro-competitive, technologically neutral and
predictable policy and regulatory framework
reflecting national realities, is essential for
building a people-centred Information Society.
Governments should intervene, as appropriate, to
correct market failures, to maintain fair
competition, to attract investment, to enhance
the development of the ICT infrastructure and
applications, to maximize economic and social
benefits, and to serve national priorities. - The Declaration of Principles of the
World Summit on the Information Society, Geneva,
2003
25A vision for telecoms
- Sustainable competition to drive down the cost of
telecommunications in South Africa - Facilities-based competition with appropriate
individual licensing - Regulation to control Significant Market Power
and essential facilities - An open, competitive telecommunication services
market with class licensing