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Ericsson deploys rural, solar-powered site with
satellite transmission in Cambodia for Star-Cell
Aug 21, 2008
Ericsson has combined a GSM base station and
satellite transmission in a solar-powered site,
enabling Cambodian mobile operator Star-Cell to
expand its network coverage in remote areas. The
solution offers affordable communications for
all and is based on Ericsson's energy-optimized
main-remote base-station.
The satellite transmission
feature provides affordable mobile-network
coverage in remote areas where other
transmission solutions are unavailable. This is
vital for bridging the digital divide, as about
80 percent of the Cambodian population lives
outside the main urban centers.
The GSM main-remote
solution has a lower environmental impact than
standard base stations, consuming up to 50
percent less energy, and helps lower total cost
of ownership by reducing operating costs.
Star-Cell has selected
Ericsson's solution to expand network coverage
and introduce EDGE-based applications to enable
mobile health and educational services for rural
communities.
Denis Ryabtsev, Chief
Marketing Officer at Star-Cell, says:
"Ericsson's solar-powered site with satellite
transmission will make a significant difference.
It enables us to expand cost-effectively into
rural areas, connect people for the first time,
and offer affordable services that improve
quality of life."
Hans Karlsson, President of
Ericsson Thailand and Indochina, says: "This
marks an important milestone and we are proud to
implement the first solar-powered solution in
Cambodia. This move highlights our technical
leadership, our commitment to sustainable
development, and our vision of providing
communication for all."
This deployment follows a
series of initiatives from Ericsson to optimize
the energy efficiency of mobile networks by
creating solutions that reduce environmental
impacts and lower operator costs. These
initiatives include: BTS Power Savings features
that put a network in stand-by mode during
off-peak hours and saves up to 15 percent of the
network access energy consumption; the
innovative site concept Ericsson Tower Tube;
biofuel-powered telecom sites; a hybrid solution
using diesel and batteries that cuts network
operating costs by up to 50 percent; and the
Solar Village Charger, co-developed with Sony
Ericsson. Ericsson delivered its first
solar-powered sites in 2000 to Maroc Telecom in
Morocco, and has so far provided more than 200
sites in Africa, Southeast Asia and the
Americas.
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