Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Internet service firms in race to keep up as traffic swells

- Romita Majumdar and Kalpana Pathak

MUMBAI:THE spike in remote work and curbs on civic life to check a raging pandemic are driving up internet use, posing unique challenges for internet service providers and telecom operators.

There is an up to 10% increase in internet traffic for telecom service providers (TSPS), according to the Bank of America Securities. Bharti Airtel Ltd has said its home broadband customers are upgrading to faster speeds and bigger data plans to work and study from home.

“As India’s fixed broadband penetratio­n is around 6%, majority of the work-from-home traffic (over 70%) is expected to be on cellular network compared to fixed broadband. Most fixed broadband companies have seen demand for installati­on picking up in the last 15-20 days,” noted a report by Bank of America Securities.

India has over 630 million mobile (3G/4G) users compared with around 19 million fixed broadband users, indicating that a large part of the work-fromhome pressure will be on mobile networks.

According to Ookla Speed test global Index, fixed broadband download speed in India increased very slightly between 2 and 9 March, while mobile download speed remained flat. When comparing with other Asian countries, Ookla found internet speeds on both mobile and fixed networks in China took a dive during the outbreak of Covid-19 in the country.

Businesses whose employees are forced to work from home are in discussion­s with internet service providers (ISPS) to check if some internet capacity can be reallocate­d from business centres to residentia­l areas, a top executive at an IT services company said.

“But this is a very complex process involving multiple ISPS and it certainly cannot be achieved overnight,” he said on condition of anonymity. He said this is why his company could not send its entire workforce home, as they handle critical services like banking and healthcare, which cannot be run on residentia­l internet connection­s.

Many users who so far used their basic phone internet connection for content streaming have begun using it for work as well.

In fact, many companies are incentivis­ing their employees, who would normally not have work-from-home authorisat­ion, to arrange for fixed line residentia­l internet connection­s.

Telecom body Cellular Operators Associatio­n of India (COAI) has reached out to OTT (over-thetop) content providers, including Youtube, Hotstar, among others, to cooperate with telecom firms to manage traffic distributi­on patterns in a way that does not strain network infrastruc­ture.

 ??  ?? India has over 630 million mobile (3G/4G) users compared with around 19 million fixed broadband users, indicating that a large part of the work-from-home pressure will be on mobile networks
India has over 630 million mobile (3G/4G) users compared with around 19 million fixed broadband users, indicating that a large part of the work-from-home pressure will be on mobile networks

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