China and Asia ‘will lead US’ in race to gigabit broadband
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China and Asia ‘will lead US’ in race to gigabit broadband

Rethink broadband report.jpg

China is set to dominate the market for gigabit broadband services, leaving US well behind in second place

A new report says that 57% of the world’s 1Gbps connections installed by 2023 will be in China. Over 42% of all Chinese homes will have access to 1Gbps services, thanks to “a series of massive build-outs led by China Mobile”.

Asia as a whole will account for more than two-thirds of all 1Gbps household connections in the world by 2023.

The report, from Rethink TV, the video research arm of Rethink Technology Research, says that “in advanced countries such as France, Switzerland and South Korea, more than 50% of households will take 1Gbps broadband by 2023”.

But in North America only 11% of households will have 1Gbps connections by 2023 (see map) – even though the US, at 33.5 million households, will be the second largest market behind China.  

“Gigabit broadband will accelerate faster than previous forecasts have imagined, growing tenfold over the next five years,” said Rethink. “After a two-year period of being high priced luxuries, 1Gbps broadband will become commonplace and inexpensive.”

Fibre will take over in most parts of the world from copper-based technologies such as G.fast, except in the US, where cable TV networks will rely on DOCSIS 3.1.

“Laggards in percentage terms will include the United Kingdom and Germany and much of Latin America,” said Rethink.

The report, by Rethink CEO and co-founder Peter White, says that China will have 191 million homes connected to 1Gbps by 2023, leading the world market. Japan will have 19.4 million and South Korea will have 9.5 million 1Gbps homes.

 

 

 

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