Press release: 3G femtocells (indoor base stations) will drive
fixed-mobile substitution
March 2007: Among the many technologies that are hyped as the ‘next big thing’ in
the cellular industry, indoor base stations (often referred to as femtocells)
are set to cause fundamental changes and will drive fixed–mobile substitution,
according to a new report, Picocells and Femtocells: will indoor base stations
transform the telecoms industry?, published by Analysys.
“The indoor base station concept has emerged rapidly and has created extensive
speculation about its potentially wide-reaching consequences”, says co-author Dr
Alastair Brydon. “A number of technologies have been over-hyped in recent years,
but femtocells have the potential to transform the telecoms industry. The trend
towards fixed–mobile substitution is increasing in many countries, and 3G
networks are at a relatively early stage in their development. In this context,
3G femtocells could not have arrived at a better time for the mobile industry.”
The report draws on interviews from a range of indoor base station experts and
vendors in Europe and the USA and describes how indoor base stations may be used
across different wireless technologies, assesses the business case for their
application and identifies the issues that need to be resolved to enable
widespread deployment.
Key findings include:
- Indoor base stations can be applied to a number of wireless technologies,
including 2G, 3G, 3G LTE, WiMAX and WiBro, but 3G femtocells present the
greatest opportunity.
- There is a compelling business case for mobile operators to deploy femtocells,
based on ARPU growth, cost savings and churn reduction. Indoor base stations can
provide a less expensive alternative to traditional outdoor cellular
infrastructure for providing in building coverage.
- Femtocells will accelerate the migration of voice traffic from fixed to mobile
networks, until 3G networks carry the majority of voice traffic. Femtocells will
undermine the case for converged cellular-WLAN services (for example, based on
UMA) by enabling very similar tariffs without the need for dedicated handsets.
“The potential of femtocells is substantial for mobile operators, but critical
implementation and performance issues need to be resolved before they can be
deployed widely”, according to Dr Mark Heath, co-author of the report. “These
include interference, range, performance, network integration and management,
handover, billing and security.”