BEIJING, Mar. 18 -- China Telecom, the country's largest fixed-line
operator, started trials of the third-generation (3G) mobile services in
Shanghai on Monday, and plans to extend the same nationwide next month.
Shanghai Telecom, China Telecom's subsidiary, said it would invest 6
billion yuan on various projects including the 2010 Expo, 3G-network
construction, and enterprise services this year. About one-third of the total
capital would be used for 3G network construction, said Zhang Weihua, general
manger of the Shanghai-based company.
According to the operator, the speed of its code division multiple access
(CDMA) 2000-based network is 3.1 megabits per second, 20 times faster than the
2G network.
"China Telecom's operations in Shanghai is more solid when compared to
other cities, hence the decision to chose the city first for 3G trials," said
Zhang Yanling, analyst, iResearch Consulting Group.
Shanghai Telecom said its 3G signals have already covered the area within
the city's outer ring, and a total of more than 2,000 3G base stations will be
built by the end of this year.
In addition, as of March 15, about 4,000 public areas in the city have been
deployed with WiFi hotspots. The network will be extended to over 5,000 units
before 2010.
China Telecom's president Shang Bin said last month that the company
planned to have 35 million new CDMA network users this year, and to extend the
number to 100 million over three years.
"China Telecom can offset its weakness in mobile operations by
strengthening its 3G services to compete with its rivals China Mobile and China
Unicom. However, user's reception of 3G services is still pending given the
incomplete CDMA network and the absence of multinational mobile phone makers
like Nokia in CDMA2000, " Zhang said.
The central government awarded the long-anticipated 3G licenses to the
country's three incumbent operators, China Mobile, China Unicom and China
Telecom this January.
China Mobile, the largest domestic cellphone operator, launched the
pre-commercial 3G services based on homegrown TD-SCDMA last April in eight
cities including Shanghai. By the end of 2008, the standard had attracted 75,600
subscribers in Shanghai.
The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has forecast that the
total investment in 3G would touch 170 billion yuan this year. It has also
estimated that the 3G services would attract nearly 400 billion yuan worth of
investment over the next three years.
(Source: chinadaily.com.cn)