Simon Čimžar, tehnični direktor, poslovna enota Dostop
Where do we go from the current 10-gigabit PON era? Which one is the next winner, 25-gigabit or 50-gigabit PON? What have we learned from the past upgrade cycles?
The pandemic times we have hardly left behind have boosted the demand for data-intense communication with reliable delivery immensely, and beyond all levels foreseen.
Analyses show that internet traffic has soared by 60% compared to pre-corona times. This is making operators increasingly aware that perpetual increases of data rates have become a new norm to end users.
But it is really just about faster and faster internet? What has happened to the goal of “fibre-to-everything”?
And where do we go from the current 10-gigabit PON era, to 25-gigabit or 50-gigabit speeds?
Let’s stop and have a quick look at the facts first.
Real-time data processing of big data, the use cases of industry 4.0, and the introduction of millimetre-wave 5G mobile transport are perceived as the next big thing for creating new revenue streams. Regardless of whether they make it there or not, they are all reliant on fibre-network infrastructure and can’t do without it. As they progress, the use cases will eventually require data rates beyond what 10-gigabit PON can offer.
This leaves us all in the industry with two key questions: when to migrate to the next PON technology, and how much the migration will cost?
Taking into account the experience from previous technology migrations – such as the one from gigabit (GPON) to 10-gigabit (XGS-PON) era –, the current demands for data rates and the current stage of 10-gigabit rollout, we can expect to see the move to the next-generation PON somewhere in the range of four to seven years.
The experience also tells us about what to expect in terms of price degradation and technology standardisation; let us not be blind for the fact that forward-thinking operators favour standardised technologies.
Given the anticipated investment in the migration, we can safely expect operators and investors to prefer leapfrogging directly to the five-fold increase of capacities over insignificant and overly expensive evolutionary steps.
There shall be room for 25G PON in certain limited-scale use cases in the near future. But my verdict is clear: The next massive technology-upgrade cycle will introduce 50G PON technology. And its initial implementation will be a combination of XGS-PON and 50G PON on the same product.
Future, prove me wrong!