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NASHUA, NH (1 March
2005)- KMI Research reports the amount of cabled fiber
installed per year worldwide will grow by a compound
annual growth rate (CAGR) of 7.5% from 2004 to 2009.
Three countries: United States, China and Japan together
will account for 69% of demand from 2005 through 2009.
Demand for those countries and the rest of the world
are shown in the accompanying figure. Underpinning
this growth is the shift in investment in developed
countries towards local loop infrastructure to offer
broadband services. China and other developing countries
continue to build out long-distance networks. These
data are from the latest edition of KMI's annual Worldwide
Optical Fiber and Cable market report.
The 7.5% CAGR is revised upwards from KMI's view one
year ago, due to stronger-thanexpected demand in North
America. Whereas the late 1990s investment in U.S.
long-distance networks was speculative, the fiber-related
investment in the local loop is tied to increased
demand for broadband services and is supported by
last year's FCC and Supreme Court decisions to protect
incumbent carriers' investment in fiber-to-the-home
(FTTH.) In the U.S., Verizon contributed to a 61%
increase in the amount of cabled single-mode fiber
installed in 2004. As a single customer, Verizon accounted
for approximately 30% of the U.S.'s 2004 cabledfiber
demand.
Verizon's shift in investment to FTTH is cause for
optimism. Although both Verizon and SBC installed
fiber closer to the customer in the late 1990s to
offer DSL, the U.S. is really only beginning FTTH
construction. Japan, on the other hand, began FTTH
construction in the mid-1990s as part of a government
initiative, which also helped buoy the industry through
the recent downturn. NTT, Japan's incumbent local
and long-distance carrier, has achieved 80% coverage
in its optical access network. The optical access
network only refers to feeder fiber installed from
the central office to the demarcation point between
underground and aerial infrastructure, and doesn't
include the distribution and drop cables that connect
to customers' homes.
As demand increases, factors relating to the last
fiber boom still need to be resolved. There continues
to be excess fiber capacity in the market. Draka Comteq
acquired the majority position in Alcatel's fiber
and cable businesses in mid-2004, and Pirelli announced
that its fiber and cable facilities were up for sale.
But so far, such restructuring has not resulted in
significant capacity reductions.
On a positive note,
the over capacity now has less effect on the market
for fiberoptic cable than in previous years. Cables
in FTTH networks have a lower average number of fibers;
for example, drop cables that connect customers' homes
to the network usually have only one fiber. The shift
towards FTTH in the U.S. and related investment by
other developed countries therefore contributes to
a 2% market increase for fiberoptic cable from 2004
through 2009.
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