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Some network models

Some network models. David Macneil David.Macneil@canarie.ca www.canarie.ca Feb 5, 2004. Organisation of Presentation. What I thought I was doing What I will do, some examples Broadband Task Force, recognition of market failure in small rural communities

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Some network models

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  1. Some network models David Macneil David.Macneil@canarie.ca www.canarie.ca Feb 5, 2004

  2. Organisation of Presentation • What I thought I was doing • What I will do, some examples • Broadband Task Force, recognition of market failure in small rural communities • Inefficient and incomplete deployment of broadband • Search for appropriate alternate models • Broadband and Rural Development Program, BRAND • Some URL’s

  3. RISQ

  4. ORION network Dec 03

  5. RFI March 2002Possible partners and needs • CANARIE Inc., which is deploying the new CA*net 4 network intended to link provincial research networks … and through them universities, research centers, government research labs, schools and other eligible sites, both with each other and with international peer networks. • NRC, which is deploying a distributed e-commerce research center in New Brunswick located at Moncton, Saint John and Fredericton with an additional link to Miramichi. • University of New Brunswick (UNB) which manages the NB-PEI Educational Computer Network (ECN), a province wide education network throughout New Brunswick linking universities and other related institutes. UNB also operates the New Brunswick GigaPOP. • ACOA and the Province of New Brunswick, which are to provide financial support for linking the NRC distributed eCommerce research centers • University of Prince Edward Island, which operates and manages the PEI Regional Advanced Network. • Dalhousie University (ACORN-NS), which operates and manages the Nova Scotia Regional Advanced Network. • Memorial University, which operates and manages the Newfoundland Regional Advanced Network.

  6. Edmundston Shippagan Bathurst Miramichi To St. John’s Sydney Moncton Truro Antigonish Sackville Saint John Wolfville Atlantic Canada Advanced Research Network RFP(by item) Charlottetown Summerside Montreal Fredericton CA*net 4 Primary Route Halifax CA*net 4 Node CA*net 4 Route Diversity NRC e-commerce network Breakout points for ORAN NB ORAN NS ORAN

  7. Edmundston Shippagan Bathurst Miramichi To St. John’s Summerside Moncton Sackville Saint John NB PEI Grid (assembled) - Production July 1, 2003- Co-op venture Charlottetown Montreal Fredericton CA*net 4 Primary Route Halifax CA*net 4 Node CA*net 4 Route Diversity NRC e-commerce network Breakout points for ORAN NB ORAN NS ORAN

  8. CA*net 4 Diversity - Option 2 Map

  9. NB / PEI Research Ring Results: • Optical Network (>2000 km GT/360 and Eastlink fiber) • 7 Years funding in place • 7 GigE Rings + OC192c • CA*net4 route diversity in Atlantic Canada except NF • Connect all NB Universities • Link UNB – UPEI GigaPops • Connect NRC sites in NB

  10. Alberta SUPERnet • Province wide network of condominium fiber to 420 communities in Alberta • Network a mix of fiber builds and existing supplier infrastructure (swap/buy/lease) • Condominium approach: All suppliers can • Buy (or swap) a share of the fiber (during build or after) • Lease bandwidth at competitive rates • Government of Alberta has perpetual right to use (IRU) • Ownership will be held at arms length • GOA/stakeholder rates are costs to run divided over users • Because of fiber capacity, bandwidth can be made available to all businesses at urban competitive rate • Total cost to GOA $193m • Bell Intrigna prime contractor • Guaranteed cost of bandwidth to all public sector institutions • $500/mo for 10 Mbps, $700/mo for 100 Mbps

  11. Alberta SUPERnet IRUs • Extended Area • 372 communities • GOA/stakeholder needs • Proceeds from businesses (urban benchmarked rates) to GOA to further network - $143 Million GOA - 100% GOA IRU • Base Area • 48 communities • GOA/stakeholder needs • Business proceeds to Bell (urban benchmarked rates) - $50 Million GOA - 33%GOA IRU - $102 Million Bell - 67% Bell IRU

  12. Alberta SUPERnet Example BUFFALO TRAILS SCHOOL DIVISION • Combination: • Fibre build • Use of Existing Infrastructure Communities with one or more school

  13. Alberta SUPERnet Impact RURAL COMMUNITIES • Future (Everywhere) • Residences • High speed DSL residential Internet at urban rates ($40/month) • Businesses • High speed business services available at competitive urban rates (eg $820/month - T1) • Higher speeds at comparable rates • Current (Typical) • Residences • 56 Kbps dial Internet ($85/Month) • No high speed Internet • Businesses • Some T1 Facilities ($2000/Month average - rates distance sensitive) • Some high speed business service on special setuparrangement

  14. Quebec University Condo Network Construit Projet démarré À venir Bande passante louée MAN de Montréal MAN d’Ottawa/Hull MAN de Québec MAN de Sherbrooke Val d’Or/Rouyn Observatoire Mont-Mégantic

  15. Construit Projet démarré À venir Bande passante louée Lionel-Groulx Lanaudière Sorel-Tracy Montreal Public Sector Condominium Networks Marie-Victorin Rosemont Montmorency Maisonneuve Ahuntsic Édouard-Montpetit Bois-de-Boulogne Vers Québec St-Laurent/Vanier Champlain Vieux-Montréal Gérald-Godin Dawson John-Abbott André-Laurendeau

  16. South Dundas IROQUOIS MORRISBURG

  17. South Dundas Results • Morrisburg , Iroquios Have Fibre Hung Electronics In and Fibre Lit • ISP’s , ASP’s all Want In the Fibre • Major Employers Inquiring • Very Positive Attitude in Community • Digital Desert to Digital Oasis

  18. Peel County Municipal Fiber Network • Mississauga, Brampton, Peel • 200 km of Fibre • 96 strand backbone • “Enough for small country” • 12-60 strands elsewhere • 12,000 strand-kilometers • Laid end-to-end = Victoria to St. John’s …...and back again

  19. Fredericton, NB “At this morning's quarterly Mayor's Business Breakfast, City of Fredericton Mayor A.M. (Sandy) DiGiacinto released details about the high-speed fibre optic cable which will be used to connected the new NRC E-Commerce Institute (UNB campus) to the Greater Fredericton Knowledge Park. Staff have been instructed by City Council to prepare a business case that would leverage this 3 km stretch of cable into an Ultra High-Speed Community Network managed by the municipality.” • Nov. 2000

  20. Fredericton • Started as Economic Development tool • MUSH, Govt., Research - ISP, carriers invited to participate • Build partners emerged quickly, $100,000 “donated” by private sector • Tender call for 8 km phase 1, $110,000, complete Sept 2001 • 48 fiber min.

  21. And then… • City formed not-for-profit “e-Novations” • RFP process not successful • New carrier enters negotiations • GT will provide: • “Customer Managed” fiber to original partners • 100Mb and GigE VPN • In production

  22. And then…2 • 50 km GT fiber • 16 km new build in 2002 • 802.11 (b) for some sites • Fred-eZone, a free municipal-wide Wi-Fi, Nov 03 • The first phase of the project (downtown and the airport), which cost $150,000, has already been completed and the city aims to deliver Wi-Fi access to all public spaces

  23. Ireland • 50,000 km of fiber rings around 123 cities, towns, 19 (2003), 48 (04), 56 (05) • 300 million Euro, 90% national govt. • Competition neutral infrastructure, open to all carriers • 5 Mb standard to home

  24. Jordan • “Connecting Jordanians” program • Fiber to all schools by 2004

  25. Value of Research Networks Paper by Dr. Tim Lance on behalf of the Net@EDU group of EDUCAUSE: http://www.educause.edu/asp/doclib/abstract.asp?ID=NET0202 This white paper, which was contributed by the Net@EDU Broadband Pricing Group, provides a vision of higher education's evolving networking needs over the next five to ten years. Articulating the role of research and education networks in our society, it explores the drivers, challenges and policy issues in deploying said networks, and the need for our community to partner with all levels of government in helping to define and achieve national networking goals.

  26. Thank you www.canet3.net/library/papers.html www.cityofchicago.org/CivicNet/civicnetRFI.pdf www.canarie.ca/advnet/workshop_2000/presentations/ www.smartwinnipeg.mb.ca/Municipal_Fibre.htm http://www.crc.ca/en/html/crc/home/research/rrba/definition (BRAND) www.light-wave.com www.enovations.ca (Fredericton) www.albertasupernet.ca www.risq.qc.ca/ www.educause.edu/asp/doclib/abstract.asp?ID=NET0202 www.canarie.ca www.canet3.net

  27. Extra

  28. Customer Empowered Networks • Universities, school boards and municipalities throughout North America are building condominium dark fiber networks in partnership with a variety of partners • Individual institutions – the customers – own and control their own strands of fiber • Fiber are configured in point to point private networks; or • Connect to local ISP or carrier hotel • Private sector maintains the fiber • Low cost LAN architectures and optics are used to light the fiber • These new concepts in customer empowered networking are starting in the same place as the Internet started – the university and research community.

  29. Background • growing trend for many Universities, schools, and large businesses/institutions to acquire own dark fiber as part of a condominium or municipal fiber build • increasing need for extreme high-Bw interconnection of large databases, distributed computer systems, instrumentation systems • more carriers are selling point-to-point wavelengths on long term leases (IRU) which can virtually extend a dark fiber network across a wide area • network now becomes an asset as opposed to a telecom service • opens up the possibility of swapping light paths with other organizations on a peer-peer basis • recent explosion in facilities which will allow institutions easy access to wavelength pooling points (a.k.a. IXs, NAPs, GigaPoPs, carrier hotels), necessary to create a swapping market

  30. Examples of CENCustomer Empowered Networks • Universities in Quebec have built their own 3500km “condominium” fiber network in partnership with 6 carriers- $US 2million • Deploy and manage their own optics and long haul transmission gear • Universities in Alberta deploy their own 400 km 4xGbe dark fiber network - $US 200K • Deploy and manage their own optics and long haul transmission gear • City of Montreal is second most fibered city in the world because of municipal owned open access conduit • Peel County – Mississauga & Brampton has built a 200km public sector fiber network - $US 5m • Many other cities including Fredericton, Toronto have developed or are looking at similar initiatives

  31. What is condominium fiber? • A number of organizations such as schools, hospitals, businesses and universities get together to fund and build a fiber network • Carrier partners are also invited to be part of condominium project • Several next generation carriers and fiber brokers are now arranging condominium fiber builds • IMS, QuebecTel, Videotron, Cogeco, Dixon Cable, GT Telecom, etc etc • Fiber is installed, owned and maintained by 3rd party professional fiber contractors – usually the same contractors used by the carriers for their fiber builds • Each institution gets its own set of fibers, at cost, on a 20 year IRU (Indefeasible Right of Use) • One time up front cost, plus annual maintenance and right of way cost approx 5% of the capital cost • Institution lights up their own strands with whatever technology they want – Gigabit Ethernet, ATM, PBX, etc • Long range laser will reach 120+ km • Ideal solution for point to point links for large fixed institutions • Payback is usually less than 18 months

  32. Market Drivers • First - low cost • 10% to 1% cost over current telecom prices. 9-36 month payback • Second - LAN invades the WAN – no complex SONET or ATM required in network • Network Restoral & Protection can be done by customer using a variety of techniques such as wireless backup, or relocating servers to a multi-homed site, etc • Third - Enables new applications and services not possible with traditional service providers • Relocation of servers and extending LAN to central site • Out sourcing LAN and web servers to a 3rd party with no performance impact • IP telephony in the wide area • HDTV video at a new price point • Fourth – Allows access to new competitive low cost telecom and IT companies at carrier neutral meet me points • Much easier to out source servers, e-commerce etc. to a 3rd party at a carrier neutral collocation facility

  33. Typical Fiber Capital Costs • Average total cost between $7 and $15 per meter as follows: • Engineering and Design: • $1 - $3 per meter for engineering, design, supervision, splicing • Plus Installation: • $7 to $10 per meter for install in existing conduit; or • $3 to $6 per meter for install on existing poles • Plus Premise termination: • Average $5k each • Plus cost of fiber: • 15¢ per strand per meter for 36 strands or less • 12¢ per strand per meter for 96 strands or less • 10¢ per strand per meter 192 strands or less • 5¢ per strand per meter over 192 strands

  34. Condo Fiber Costs - Examples • Des affluents: Total cost $1,500,000 ($750,000 for schools) • 70 schools • 12 municipal buildings • 204 km fiber • $1,500,000 total cost • average cost per building - $18,000 per building • Mille-Isles: Total cost $2,100,000 ($1,500,000 for schools) • 80 schools • 18 municipal buildings • 223km • $21,428 per building • Laval: Total cost $1,800,000 ($1,000,000 for schools) • 111 schools • 45 municipal buildings • 165 km • $11,500 per building • Peel county: Total cost $5m – 100 buildings • Cost per building $50,000

  35. Conclusion • Many governments have recognized the importance of access to low cost dark fiber as fundamental economic enabler • It will be the 21st century equivalent to the roads and railways that were built in the 20th century

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