ZTE takes PON optical line terminal lead
Thursday, May 3, 2012 at 3:30PM
Roy Rubenstein in 10GEPON, EPON, FTTx, GPON, NGPON2, Song Shi Jie, XGPON1, ZTE, broadband access

ZTE shipped 1.8 million passive optical network (PON) optical line terminals (OLTs) in 2011 to become the leading supplier with 41 percent of the global market, according to Ovum. 

 

"ZTE is co-operating with some Tier 1 operators in Europe and the US for 10GEPON and XGPON1 testing"

Song Shi Jie, ZTE

 

 

 

The market research firm also ranks the Chinese equipment maker as the second largest supplier of PON optical network terminals (ONT), with 28 per cent global market share in 2011.  

China now accounts for over half the total fibre-to-the-x (FTTx) deployments worldwide. ZTE says 1.05 million of its OLTs were deploy in China, with 70 percent for the EPON standard and the rest GPON. Overall EPON accounts for 85% of deployments in China. However GPON deployments are growing and ZTE expects the technology to gain market share in China. 

There are some 300 million broadband users in China, made up of DSL, fibre-to-the-building (FTTB) and -curb (FTTC), says Song Shi Jie, director of fixed network product line at ZTE.

Of the three main operators, China Telecom is the largest. It is deploying FTTB and is moving to fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) deployments using GPON. China Unicom has a similar strategy. China Mobile is focussed on FTTB and LAN technology; because it is a mobile operator and has no copper line assets it uses LAN cabling for networking within the building.

The split ratio - the number of PON ONTs connected to each OLT - varies depending on the deployment. "In the fibre-to-the-building scenario, the typical ratio is 1:8 or 1:16; for fibre-to-the-home the typical ratio is 1:64," says Song.

ZTE has also deployed 200,000 10 Gigabit EPON (10GEPON) lines in China but none elsewhere, either 10GEPON or XGPON1 (10 Gigabit GPON). "ZTE is co-operating with some Tier 1 operators in Europe and the US for 10GEPON and XGPON1 testing," says Song.

Song attributes ZTE's success to such factors as reduced power consumption of its PON systems and its strong R&D in access. 

The vendor says its PON platforms consume a quarter less power than the industry average. Its systems use such techniques as shutting down those OLT ports that are not connected to ONTs. It also employs port idle and sleep modes to save power when there is no traffic. Meanwhile, ZTE has 3,000 engineers engaged in fixed access product R&D.

As for the next-generation NGPON2 being development by industry body FSAN, Song says there are a variety of technologies being proposed but that the picture is still unclear. 

ZTE is focussing on three main next-generation PON technologies: wavelength division multiplexing PON (WDM-PON), hybrid time division multiplexing (TDM)/ WDM-PON (or TWDM-PON) and orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) PON. "We think OFDM PON can provide high security, high bandwidth and easy network maintenance," says Song.

ZTE says that the NGPON2 standard will be mature in 2015 but that commercial deployments will only start in 2018. 

Article originally appeared on Gazettabyte (https://www.gazettabyte.com/).
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