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Energy costs represent the third most significant operating expense item for
cellular carriers today, and fluctuating energy costs are a significant area
of concern for business planners. The introduction of mobile broadband means
that the energy required per subscriber arising from increasing data uptake
will push per-subscriber energy operating expense for cellular solutions
past acceptable barriers unless carriers move from a traditional
cellular-only approach to one that integrates WiMAX and Metro Wi-Fi, says
ABI Research.
"From a pure coverage perspective WiMAX is twice as energy-cost-effective and metro Wi-Fi is 50 times more energy-cost-effective than WCDMA," says director of wireless research Stuart Carlaw. "When data traffic is factored into the equation, WiMAX can accommodate 11 times today's average data consumption and still be more energy-cost-efficient compared to WCDMA or HSDPA."
A recent ABI Research study ('Energy Efficiency Analysis for Mobile Broadband Solutions') found that the total energy consumption arising from mobile broadband service delivery is forecast to grow from 42.8 billion kilowatt hours (KWh) in 2005 to 124.4 billion KWh in 2011. The Asia Pacific region will account for most of this growth.
Visit: http://www.abiresearch.com