2011 broadband growth fastest in 5 years
March 21, 2012
From Colin Mann at IP&TV World Forum
Broadband and IPTV growth spiked to a high in 2011 with rates higher than at any time in the last five years, according to year-end figures published by the Broadband Forum. Overall, broadband growth is estimated at 65,493,596 lines, bringing the global total to 597,322,636, a quarterly increase of 2.6 per cent – and an annual growth rate of 12.3 per cent. The figures, prepared for the Broadband Forum by broadband industry analysts Point Topic, also highlight the strongest ever quarter of growth in IPTV which is today’s most demanding application for high speed broadband.
“This is an exciting return to higher growth figures and points to a strengthening in the broadband market,” commented Robin Mersh, CEO of the Broadband Forum. “With a number of active new markets coming online and standards based deployments becoming common – we are seeing broadband move into the daily lives of more and more people the world over. A great example of this is the exceptional growth in some key Eastern European markets, such as Russia, Poland and the Ukraine.”
Russia proved to be a peak performer in 2011 in both Broadband and IPTV figures, with over 36 per cent growth in Broadband and more than doubling its IPTV subscribers from 495,500 to 1,145,000 in just one year.
With 254,721,342 broadband subscriber lines at the end of 2011, Asia is by far the biggest region overall, though its growth was slower in percentage terms during the last quarter than earlier in the year. The sheer size of the market means that it continues to take market share even when growth is lower. The region added 7,882,421 subscribers in Q4 of 2011, a rate of 3.2 per cent in the quarter, representing annual growth of 16.4 per cent.
Significant changes in the Top 20 broadband rankings are appearing as Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC), plus the Ukraine all show double-digit growth. Russia showed the highest growth rate with 36.85 per cent over the year, and India is also moving up the rankings with an annual growth of 24.46 per cent.
In terms of technology developments, DSL – with 60.8 per cent of the overall market share – continues to be the dominant broadband technology, although it is beginning to lose ground to other access technologies. The expectation is for hybrid fibre/DSL deployment solutions to continue to grow, delivering broadband for more and more subscribers. These hybrid fibre/DSL deployments have been able to deliver significantly more bandwidth to consumers while allowing efficient re-use of existing infrastructure. Fibre to the Home (FTTH) is increasing in appeal and this is likely to accelerate as availability increases, but Point Topic reports that their expectation is that the hybrid fibre access solution will be the fastest growing for the next five years. The combined market share for FTTH and FTTx/hybrid technologies has again grown from 16 per cent in Q3 to 16.7 per cent at the end of 2011, encroaching on cable’s market share, which has dropped to 19.4 per cent.
IPTV’s best quarter ever saw net additions of 3.68 million to finish the year strong with more than 58.2 million IPTV subscribers worldwide. Though Europe still holds the top regional spot – China is the fastest growing country and now has over 12 million subscribers, outstripping France for the top spot in the Top Ten IPTV countries world-wide.
“China will continue to dominate the top of the charts from now on. This is a market with greater headroom, more demand and overall more potential than anywhere else,” commented Oliver Johnson, CEO of Point Topic. “Outside the top ten, the prime movers are Malaysia, Vietnam and Belarus. There are a number of conditions that have to be in place for IPTV adoption to be significant. The availability of enough consistent bandwidth tops the list but pricing needs to be right for the consumer as well. Once those metrics are at certain levels you start to see real growth.”
Mersh said the work of the Broadband Forum provided the industry with the tools needed to expedite rollouts, improve the quality of service delivery and to take advantage of the cost benefits of deploying a standards based network. “We will continue to assist providers with new ways to engineer smarter and faster connections,” he promised.