Presentation
Download
Report
Transcript Presentation
Interconnection arrangements for IP-enabled
NGNs - Discussion in Germany
Dr. Cara Schwarz-Schilling
Bundesnetzagentur
ITU Workshop: What rules for IP-enabled NGN‘s
Geneva, March 23-24, 2006
The opinion expressed in this presentation are the personal view of the author and do not
prejudge any official position or decision that BNetzA might issue.
1
Definition of NGN
No generic definition of the term, but a general
understanding:
A broadband network that will be packet switched and
IP based
Access, transport, control and services will be
separate layers
Many separate networks converge to form a core NGN
supporting a multitude of services
There will be open, standardised interfaces between
the different layers
2
Agenda
NGN
–
–
–
–
–
Definition
Economic consequences
Strategies of operators
Network Structure
Cost drivers
IP Interconnection Regime – Food for thought
– Billing systems at the wholesale level: Bill &Keep
– Relationsship between wholesale and retail pricing
– Advisory Group on Framework Conditions for IP-Based
Network Interconnection”
3
NGN: Economic consequences?
Service-related functions and intelligence can be provided
independently of the underlying transport technology
Traditional switch is split into media gateway to ensure transport and
the softswitch for call control
Cost optimisation and deployment of new services
This will allow for more fine grained division of labour and faster
provision of new services and greater opportunity for innovation
Different providers will be able to create value at the separate
functional levels of access, transport, control and services
Customers will decide on the provision of services along the value
chain: in a more decentralised manner using specialized services or
via vertically integrated providers offering bundles of services
4
NGN strategies (1)
PSTN operators prefer managed IP networks using
centralized intelligence within a controlled platform
based on traditional standardisation processes of the
ITU and ETSI
ISPs tend to rely on decentralized intelligence at the
periphery (distributed in the end-user equipment)
based on IETF standardization
The question to be answered is: which model will
prevail – a centralized approach (control by network
design) or a decentralized approach with open access
allowing more service providers to offer services?
5
NGN strategies (2)
Operators might follow different migration strategies
– Substitution of PSTN by IP network, starting at the
core moving to the enduser migrating all services to
IP
– Overlay approach involving parallel running of
PSTN and IP network
NGN strategies and different migration paths will
impact on the nature of interconnection between the
networks.
6
NGN: Network structure
Switching to NGNs may imply
– changes in the number of network hierarchy levels
– rearrangement of core network nodes,
– therefore a geographic rearrangement of points of
interconnect.
– likely that the number of interconnection points at
the lowest network level could be reduced
“Leaner” NGN structures may imply problems
of sunk costs / stranded investments for both
incumbents and competitors – how will this be
dealt with?
7
NGN: Cost drivers
How does the cost structure of IPnetworks differ from cost structure of
PSTN?
What are the relevant cost drivers?
– Volume?
– Service characteristics?
– Network topology (Router/infrastructure)?
– Router hops?
8
IP-Interconnection Regime (1)
Cost determination according to LRIC
determined by “efficient” network
– Has the IP network to be considered the
“efficient” network?
– This implies that cost of IP networks might
already be relevant for PSTN
interconnection today
Migration phase – unified concept of cost
of efficient service provision?
9
IP-Interconnection Regime (2)
Differentiated according to
– Service (e.g. voice, data etc.)?
– Quality of Service class (best effort, priority,
guaranteed)?
– PSTN vs. IP?
– Core level vs. access level?
10
Billing systems at the wholesale level
Advent of Voice over IP leads to a clash of
billing systems for voice services at the
wholesale level
– PSTN: Calling Party’s Network Pays
– IP-network: Bill &Keep including Receiving Party
paying for termination through the internet access
charge
– Arbitrage?
11
Bill&Keep Interconnection
Regime (1)
No payment of origination and termination charges to
other networks
– Does not mean “Interconnection at zero price”
– Barter between participating networks
– Requires agreement on
topology of PoI → Emphasis on network planning of
participating networks
depth of networks
– Possibly transit payments in the core network, B&K in
the access network only
– Transition toward Bill&Keep?
12
Bill&Keep Interconnection
Regime (2)
Advantages
– No transactions costs for wholesale pricing and billing, no need
for price regulation
– No inevitable termination monopoly
– No tariff arbitration
– Internalization of (positive) network externalities
– Very flexible end-user pricing, no price squeezes
Drawbacks
– Topology of PoI and required network depth could increase
market concentration.
– Potentially inefficient investments in parallel networks
– Tradeoff between hot potato problem and too many PoI
13
Relationship between wholesale
and retail pricing
Does Bill&Keep necessarily lead to RPP at
the retail level?
– Depends on whether traffic is balanced and how
strongly incoming and outgoing traffic are
correlated
– Tendency toward flat rates and buckets likely
14
“Advisory Group on Framework
Conditions for IP-Based
Network Interconnection”
BNetzA has been setting up a small Advisory
Group
Experts with long standing experience of the
market appointed by BNetzA
Purely advisory function
Work was taken up in August 2005
Final report approximately after 1 year
15
Dr. Cara Schwarz-Schilling
Head of Section Internet Economics,
Federal Network Agency
P.O. Box 8001, 53105 Bonn
Tel+49(0)228 14-1190, Fax +49 (0) 1805 734870-1435
[email protected]
http://www.bnetza.de
16