Almost 10 per cent of all broadband internet connections in Asia were being
delivered over ultra-high speed fibre optic lines by the end of last year,
according to new market research.
Japan and Korea are leading the way with significant fibre broadband
infrastructure in 'last mile' systems such as fibre-to-the-home and
fibre-to-the-building.
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Telecoms carriers in these countries, such as
Nippon
Telegraph and Telephone (NTT) and
Korea
Telecom, are investing heavily in replacing xDSL over copper infrastructure
with fibre by 2011, according to research firm
In-Stat.
Existing fibre connections already offer speeds up to 100Mbps, and are far
from reaching their full capacity.
Over six million users of NTT's broadband internet service in Japan had fibre
optic connections installed by the end of March, exceeding the number using
slower ADSL links for the first time.
"The next-generation broadband access services strategy, as proven in markets
like Japan, South Korea and Hong Kong, is to focus on market proliferation of
value-added broadband services," said In-Stat analyst Bryan Wang.
"This is driven by the launch of compelling broadband content (IPTV and VoIP)
and innovative broadband pricing plans."
Home fibre internet subscribers in Japan will rise by more than three million
a year on average, exceeding 27 million by 2011, according to earlier research
by the
Yano
Research Institute, a Tokyo-based technology consulting firm.
More than 225 million people in the Asia-Pacific region will be using fibre
broadband connections by 2011, In-Stat estimates, the majority of which are
expected to be in new markets.
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