
Europe
: While 2003 was a transition year for cellular base stations, 2004
is the one where reality will catch up with the vision, according
to In-Stat/MDR. The high-tech market research firm reports that carriers
worldwide have started to execute aggressively on plans that had been
delayed for years, and customers have even started to show some sign
of excitement. In 2004, In-Stat/MDR forecasts that worldwide cellular
base station revenue will be down 14.4% from 2003 due partly to price
pressures and an increase in spectrum efficiency. However, during
this period, the actual number of base stations is forecasted to increase
slightly, from 329,483 in 2003, to 333,876 in 2004.
Overall,
the trend in new base station deployments from 2003 to 2008 is generally
down, although In-Stat/MDR believes that there will be a small upswing
in 2008, as more demand for data services starts to emerge. According
to Allen Nogee, a Principal Analyst with In-Stat/MDR, “As base
station technology becomes more efficient, the worldwide need for
new base stations decreases. In addition, many modern base stations
simply don’t need to be replaced. They have operated, and will
continue to operate for many years. Rather, much of the new base station
demand is related to the need for greater capacity to handle an ever-increasing
amount of subscribers, in addition to added capacity to handle the
growing demand for cellular data services.”
In-Stat/MDR has
also found that:
By 2008, W-CDMA will represent 23.1% of deployed base stations, worldwide.
And while GSM will represent 61.5%, this is a very impressive showing
for W-CDMA, which will have gained wide-scale acceptance in a relatively
short period of time.
While
there are over 15 million 3G subscribers worldwide, this still only
represents 1 subscriber in 100. However this is a good start. In the
US, Sprint, Verizon and AT&T Wireless have all started to deploy
their 3G services, although, in somewhat limited locations, to start.
The report, 5-Year Cellular Base Station Forecast: The Sun Has Started
To Shine Through The Clouds (#IN0401275GW), looks at some of the trends
occurring in base stations, in terms of technology and adoption, and
includes estimates and forecasts of new cellular macro base stations
deployed, existing cellular macro base stations deployed, and base
station revenue. It also includes breakouts by region (US, Canada,
Latin America, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Japan and ROW), as
well as top-level technology (GSM, TDMA, PDC, CDMA, and W-CDMA).