In the STEM newsletter for October 2002, we announced that we were going to examine
the economic case for the shift to VoIP in the public switched-telephony network,
with the help of a model which would provide a detailed breakdown of the required
investment and its impact on existing capital and operating expenditure. Through
a collaboration with Mahindra BT and Siemens, the framework for this model is now
complete, and its structure has been presented at both the STEM User Group Meeting
in September and the ITU Telecom World Forum in Geneva in October.
In a continuation of the original newsletter article, we examine the technological
and economic context which promotes the possible transformation of the core network,
make a high-level comparison of technologies and define a plausible transition roadmap.
We then decide on a suitable geographical scale and topology as the basis for an
econometric model.
Time for change
Time division multiplexing (TDM) circuit-switched voice networks represent a mature
and polished technology. Many incumbent digital voice networks have been in operation
with little fundamental change for ten years. While some vendors still maintain
and continue to deliver these products, others now focus exclusively on promoting
IP-based solutions, with increasing maintenance costs for local exchanges as spares
become scarce.
Although the modern PSTN is a well-oiled product in its present form, ‘value-added’
extensions to the stand-alone voice service are costly and slow to develop, since
any related data must be transported over parallel networks. Furthermore, demand
for converged services is growing, especially for call-centre applications.
VoIP technology is maturing
IP telephony over the public Internet is a ‘best-efforts’ offering and suffers from
routeing delays and occasional blocking. However, private networks running IPv6
technology support priority classes and quality of service (QoS), and multi-protocol
label switching (MPLS) reduces routeing delays. VoIP is becoming recognised as a
proven technology on corporate LANs and WANs. The use of dense wavelength division
multiplexing (DWDM) equipment in the core network means that bandwidth prices are
falling, and the emergence of very fast core routers removes the necessity for processing
overheads (such as silence compression) which would otherwise introduce delays.
Although an uncompressed 64kbit/s voice channel may incur an overhead of between
100% and 200%, depending on the core IP or ATM network encapsulation, the fact is
that ‘brute force’ network dimensioning is becoming a reality, and removes many
of the barriers to high performance.
Next-generation voice offers hope
Fixed-line revenues are falling as a result of regulation and mobile cannibalisation.
Operators hope that an integrated IP platform may support ‘joined-up’ voice services,
such as ‘click-to-call’ from the PC, with the potential to generate new revenue
streams.
Dynamic routeing with VoIP offers the possibility to have a single number that connects
to your current call location, be it at home, in the office, or on the move. Residential
broadband could enable the introduction of fixed handsets with features that are
characteristic of mobile systems, or even a roaming ‘personal handset’ configuration
that could include a portable address book.
Making the case for change
All of these value statements are great for advertisements and for motivating research
and development, but not for justifying billion-dollar investments! A detailed business
case must justify investment in next-generation networks (NGN), demonstrating the
promised reductions in opex and revenue from new services, in order to convince
investors wary from the lessons of the crash in hi-tech stocks. Note: technical
viability is an assumption for the business case!
Focus on the core network
A significant proportion of most incumbents’ customers and revenues come from rural
areas, requiring the local network intelligence of digital local exchanges to be
distributed over a very large number of sites. VoIP offers a greatly simplified
switching architecture: media gateways at the edge of the network ‘talk’ over a
homogeneous IP platform with the aid of a few core soft switches and related servers;
the vast majority of switching sites become commodity routeing or aggregation points
in a rationalised core network.
Even if residential broadband offers home gateway devices with features which will
finally render conventional handsets obsolete, operators cannot control the pace
of replacement of residential customer premises equipment (CPEs). However, conventional
services can still be delivered at the edge of the network, with media gateways
at the remote concentrator (‘edge-of-fibre’ network) in such a way that the core
voice transport is opaque to the user. Our model will therefore focus on the migration
to VoIP in the core network, with the majority of lines still offered as voice ‘circuits’;
rather than IP pipes.
Opex spending should be reduced
A central objective for the operator is to reduce the number of parallel networks
which must be maintained at local exchanges by pushing service delivery to the edge
in the form of so-called ‘multi-service access platforms’. Smaller capacity (and
therefore better utilised) units may be located at remote concentrators where required,
or deployed as enterprise CPEs. This move away from the so-called ‘stove-pipe’ model
should reduce equipment maintenance overheads and facilitate more efficient service
configuration and delivery. For example, BT’s 21c network project has target opex
savings of around GBP270 million per year for the UK.
Comparison of technologies
The Exhibit below illustrates the main cost components of the conventional TDM voice
architecture. The copper local loop connects a subscriber’s handset to a line card
at a remote concentrator unit (RCU), i.e. a small building housing the distribution
frame, line-card equipment (possibly an aggregator for other data services), then
typically an STM-1 interface. The RCU has a fibre connection to the digital local
exchange (DLE), which may in fact serve customers from 5–20 or more RCUs, depending
on the area.

Simplified view of conventional TDM voice architecture
The DLE in turn has a fibre uplink to a digital main switch unit (DMSU). Depending
on the number of subscribers, this may require an STM-16 or STM-64 interface, and
in fact most (though not all) DLEs will be ‘dual-homed’. In other words, parallel
uplinks are implemented to two separate DMSUs for maximum network resilience.
International gateways and other points of interconnection will typically be located
at DMSU sites and the DMSUs are served by some kind of meshed core network. (Since
the dimensioning of this core network is dependent on both voice and data services,
and probably not significantly affected by a migration to VoIP, it is not included
in the model.)
Essentials of VoIP core overlay
A media gateway is a device which is designed to interface between a conventional
voice circuit and packet-switched voice traffic on an IP network. The simplest upgrade
path is to install a media gateway which plugs into the TDM interface from a rack
of conventional line cards, and to connect this to a Gigabit Ethernet network running
IPv6 and MPLS.

VoIP core overlay
Number–address translation is performed by a central ENUM server(s), and a ‘soft
switch’ handles the call or session set-up (for billing and so on). A number of
soft switches may be distributed around an incumbent’s network, but only at main
switch sites. These soft switches are servers dimensioned in term of ports or concurrent
sessions. Since the actual voice packets are routed directly to the call destination,
not ‘through’ a soft switch, their actual location is not that critical.
An important point is that, once all RCUs for a given DLE are migrated to VoIP,
the complex DLE is replaced by simple bandwidth aggregation. This effect is repeated
at very many sites as the migration is rolled-out over the network.
A PSTN gateway is essential during the migration, acting as the interface between
migrated customers and the remaining PSTN, and will remain necessary for external
legacy networks for years to come.
Technology comparison
The model compares two main scenarios, the first in which the operator retains all
voice services on TDM, and the second exploring a roadmap for the introduction of
NGN services and the migration of all core voice transport to IP. Additional scenarios
will examine technical alternatives for the edge of the network.
Geographical scale
This vendor-neutral model will describe the complete network of an idealised incumbent
operator in a small Scandinavian country with:
- 2.5 million residential lines
- 500 digital local exchange (DLE) sites
- 25 digital main switch unit (DMSU) sites.
This provides a more manageable data set than many larger countries, but retains
sufficient detail to invite comparison with any incumbent operator’s network. The
demonstrator model developed to date uses five geo-types for local exchange costs,
but an individual operator may choose to model at the individual local exchange
level for maximum detail.
Roadmap for transition
Phase 1
2003–08
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Edge CPE devices are introduced to deliver integrated multi-service access interface
for corporate customers, some with PABX traffic routed over a virtual E1 to the
PSTN, but a growing proportion running VoIP on the corporate LAN, and transported
over Gigabit Ethernet (providing required QoS) to a couple of VoIP/PSTN gateways
(redundancy). Soft-switch capacity is gradually increased, with capex falling from
GBP25 to GBP10 per port over five years.
|
Phase 2
2003–13
|
Mix of SDSL or FTTP for SMEs with smaller edge access devices, again with a growing
proportion with IP phones; up to five VoIP/PSTN gateways.
|
Phase 3
2008–13
|
Assumption that an appropriate feature-set for carrier-grade voice will have
been developed through experience with business sector. Individual local exchanges
are replaced (according to an explicit replication template) as obsolescence determines.
Converged DSLAM edge devices deliver TDM voice or ADSL (remote configuration) to
98% of subscribers, such that individual local concentrators may be ‘peeled off’
PSTN network according to a manageable work plan.
|
So it works, but does it make money?
The ‘do-nothing’ scenario should show strong erosion of both price and market share
for a fixed-line voice product, as mobile call charges fall and 3G addresses 2G
spectrum limits.
Different incumbents have varying obsolescence issues regarding TDM, but one conclusion
may be that an incumbent should make the transition (to IP) while it can still justify
investment in its voice network.
We expect opex costs to rise over time for TDM, in contrast to those for VoIP, which
we expect to fall as global economies of scale are realised.
The model which has been developed so far demonstrates the feasibility of linking
these complex technological and topological factors into a business case, but the
variables (including age of existing TDM network, and even resilience of copper
to local climate) are such that conclusive quantitative results will only emerge
from critical studies on behalf of individual operators.
Sections of this article are © 2003 International
Telecommunication Union (ITU) and were first published in the Forum Proceedings
of the ITU Telecom World 2003 Forum. No endorsement by the ITU of the opinions expressed
in this article is implied.