The National - News

Mobile networks cover the planet, ‘but still half the world is offline’

- ALKESH SHARMA

While many countries have started 5G trials, its predecesso­rs 2G and 3G still remain underutili­sed, the first elected woman member of the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union (ITU) said.

As a specialise­d agency of the United Nations, ITU has permanent presence in 13 countries. Doreen Bogdan-Martin is the first woman to have attained a leadership position in its 153-year history.

“Countries are carrying out trials but still some believe that 5G is basically 4G on steroids. It’s just like a space race among nations on who will reach first,” Ms Bogdan-Martin, the director of the ITU’s telecoms developmen­t bureau, told The

National.

“When we look at 2G or 3G, our planet is covered, but still half the world is offline. We need to recognise that still a lot could be done through 2G and 3G … We can’t afford to ignore their unharnesse­d potential.”

Fifth generation of cellular mobile technology, or 5G, will enable rapid data transfer, energy saving, cost reduction and widespread device connectivi­ty through Internet of Things.

ITU estimates that about 3 billion people will remain offline in 2020 in the absence of a co-ordinated approach towards connectivi­ty.

Most of these will be in developing nations.

ITU’s Connect 2020 Agenda calls for up to 50 per cent of households in developing nations to be connected to the internet by 2020, and also to minimise price discrimina­tion that is keeping many offline.

“One of the major barriers is affordabil­ity – services are too costly or devices are too expensive,” said Ms Bogdan-Martin.

“Another huge issue is irrelevanc­e of content. People don’t want to go online because they are not interested in content

ITU estimates that about 3 billion people will remain offline in 2020 in the absence of a co-ordinated connectivi­ty

that is not in their local language.”

Over the past months, ITU has collaborat­ed with other UN agencies to understand how to create content in regional languages to meet local demands.

By March or April next year, ITU expects 50 per cent of the world’s population to be online. The UN body is taking a number of initiative­s to connect over a billion people by 2020. The global population is around 7.6 billion, according to UN data.

“The UN has Agenda 2030 for sustainabl­e developmen­t and then we have 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals … but it is not possible to achieve them if we don’t have global connectivi­ty,” said Ms Bogdan-Martin.

“My immediate priority is to develop infrastruc­ture and help developing countries in Africa and South East Asia that have greatest challenges. There are least developed countries that have internet access below 15 per cent.”

“Current mobile broadband prices are still significan­tly more than 2 per cent of GNI [gross national income] per capita in most LDCs [least developed countries] and unaffordab­le for the large majority of the population,” she said.

“We have set 2025 as the target for developing countries. We have set an affordabil­ity target for entry-level broadband at 2 per cent.”

ITU estimates that it will take global investment of $450 billion in network infrastruc­ture to connect the next 1.5 billion unconnecte­d people worldwide.

The union is targeting that by 2025, broadband/internet user penetratio­n to reach 75 per cent globally.

“We have limited budgets so we are playing the role of a connector by bringing bodies like the World Bank, regional banks, national developmen­t agencies and private sector around the table,” she said.

“The connectivi­ty divide could be addressed by having the right regulatory framework to attract investment­s. Besides we need recognitio­n at the top to ensure state heads give it a priority,” said Ms Bogdan-Martin.

“Addressing digital gender gap is also essential to solve the connectivi­ty quandary,” she added.

 ?? ITU ?? Doreen Bogdan-Martin is a director of the UN telco body
ITU Doreen Bogdan-Martin is a director of the UN telco body

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