|
Get the ICT news from C114 delivered to your inbox everyday.
4 Huawei 5 ZTE 6 Cisco 7 Ericsson 10 Nortel 11 TD-SCDMA 12 Nokia 13 Motorola 14 Samsung 15 Utstarcom 16 ASB 17 MediaTek 18 WiMmax 19 WCDMA 20 CDMA |
Alcatel-Lucent gears up for Kiwi broadband push
Updated:2008/7/24 10:32
Alcatel-Lucent is at the centre of New Zealand’s network building efforts, delivering gear and expertise to Telecom for its massive projects, to Transpower and to state-owned enterprise Kordia among others. With over 800 full-time staff in the country — and growing — the appointment of a local CEO is, perhaps, overdue. The fact that the position has been filled by someone familiar with New Zealand is a bonus. Steve Lowe took the job after eight years in the Asia-Pacific region, most of that with AT&T. He returned to New Zealand in 2007 and won the CEO gig earlier this year. He says the appointment is about strengthening executive-level representation in New Zealand and empowering the local business. He has oversight over business growth and customer relationships and, as the only local director, other delegations and decision-making power “within an envelope”, he says. That includes autonomy over new initiatives and products, he says. Lowe also heads a company that spent most of last year bedding down the merger between Alcatel and Lucent, which was finalised in late 2006. Alcatel-Lucent’s relationship with Telecom is long-standing. It works for the company across the board, building mobile and fixed-line networks, including the company’s new $400 million 3G mobile network. This month, Telecom announced a further contract with Alcatel-Lucent for a $130 million nationwide IP network to bring voice, internet and mobile telephony on to a single, integrated platform. The contract runs through to December 2009. The development is a component of Telecom’s operational separation undertakings. Less well-known is the work the company is undertaking for Transpower. In 2007, Lowe’s company began a five-year contract which will see it design, build and operate an all-IP network to connect 192 sites, including power stations and substations. The network will replace an existing SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) network, but goes beyond sensors to deliver improved management and control, Lowe says. He says the arrival of a new executive team at Telecom in the middle of the broadband debate makes it “an interesting time”. Given that level of activity it should be no surprise that Alcatel-Lucent has hired over 200 new staff this year. Lowe adds that there are no signs of a slowdown in network investment ahead of the election, despite the uncertainty of two quite different and competing broadband strategies from the major political parties. “We’re encouraged by both of the announcements,” he says. “They are similar in intent and initiative.” Both offer opportunities for the private sector to bid for a share of funds, he says, and the regulatory environment has established some “hard and fast” deadlines. However, the access network is only one part of the user experience, Lowe says. We need capacity nationally and internationally as well. He is encouraged by investment in the Southern Cross Cable. Lowe says the arrival of new competitors to Alcatel-Lucent, such as China’s Huawei, is more noticeable offshore than locally. Ericsson features as a competitor in the mobile segment. “Typically we are number one in wireline, one or two for IP networking and two or three for wireless,” he says. Outsourcing and managed services are growing rapidly, he says. Alcatel-Lucent outlines fibre options Alcatel-Lucent has its own position on the debate between fibre to the home and to the node: calling its approach “fibre to the most economic point”. That strategy was presented to the recent Tel.Con 9 conference, in Auckland, by Alcatel-Lucent’s VP of solutions and strategy Ric Clark. Clark notes there are still opportunities for improvements in the performance of the copper network. However, both copper and wireless broadband are constrained. In the medium- to long-term fibre is the answer. Fibre-to-the-node can be completed quickly and will enable the delivery of “triple play” services, for the delivery of voice, internet and IPTV, to bolster carrier income as traditional voice revenue declines. After that, fibre can be deployed to the home as it gets cheaper. Clark makes the point that cabinets and ducts, built for unbundling and VDSL delivery, can be reused for fibre. In addition, exchanges can be consolidated and costs saved. But, in the end, to extend fibre deployment beyond the economic point, where payback periods are longer, requires a policy-driven approach from government.
Source:computerworld ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent's Big Plans (2008-12-2) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent Could Dump Mobiles To End Pain (2008-12-2) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent introduces new services to reduce network energy consumption (2008-11-27) ¡¤MobiFone signs expansion contract with Alcatel-Lucent (2008-11-27) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent Names New CFO (2008-11-27) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent and Jeskell team up to deliver unique user-centric security solutions for enterprises (2008-11-26) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent Wins Vietnamese GSM Contract (2008-11-26) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent Australasia head, Hilary Mine, to leave (2008-11-20) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent selected by EMTS to deploy a turnkey mobile cellular network in Nigeria (2008-11-19) ¡¤China, India to fuel Alca-Lu growth ¨C CEO (2008-11-18) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent eye India for growth (2008-11-17) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent plans to expand India operations (2008-11-17) ¡¤New Alca-Lu CEO announces restructuring plan (2008-11-17) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent signs non-UK network transformation contract with BT (2008-11-17) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent: Verwaayen's plan (2008-11-12) ¡¤France¡¯s Hub t¨¦l¨¦com chooses Alcatel-Lucent as an industrial partner (2008-11-10) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent names Adolfo Hernandez as head of the Europe, Middle East and Africa Region (2008-11-10) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent Signs non-UK Network Transformation Contract With BT (2008-11-7) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent to provide WiMAX network for Aria (2008-11-6) ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent Wins Italian WiMAX Contract (2008-11-5) |
Latest News
¡¤Nokia unveils the N97 mobile phone ¡¤Nokia Unveils The N97, Its Real iPhone Competitor ¡¤KPN to meet 2010 targets despite credit crisis-paper ¡¤AsiaInfo to Develop BI System for China Unicom's Zhejiang Province ¡¤H3C Selects RMI's Multi-Core Multi-Threaded XLS(R) Processor ¡¤IBM laying off 2,600 Asia-Pac workers? ¡¤Omantel and TMI qualify for second stage of wireless tender ¡¤Chunghwa Telecom to start selling Apple's iPhone on Dec. 13 Hot News Review
¡¤China Unicom to Launch 1st WCDMA Trial Network on Dec 31 ¡¤ZTE unveils another iPhone clone ¡¤China mobile to develop proprietary cell phone operating system ¡¤China Mobile Lures 320,000 TD-SCDMA Friendly Users ¡¤Huawei of China takes stock after a frustrating year ¡¤China Mobile Limited to Provide 3G by March 2009 ¡¤Ericsson to Invest more in China ¡¤Huawei 08 Terminal Business to Surge 74% ¡¤China Mobile: Tea Leaves Give Mixed Reading ¡¤Alcatel-Lucent introduces new services to reduce network energy consumption |