News | March 13, 2008

Municipal Wi-Fi Will Extend Its Global Service Area To 30,000+ Square Miles By 2012

New York, NY - In 2004, there were only 520 square miles of networked municipal Wi-Fi. However, ABI Research forecasts a nearly sixty-fold increase over the next several years, to more than 30,000 square miles.

At present, the United States leads in municipal Wi-Fi deployments – but Canada, Japan, South Korea, and Western Europe are undergoing expansion of municipal Wi-Fi infrastructure and applications.

Varying levels of maturity and acceptance exist within this market, spread across global regions and individual countries. The following is a snapshot of some major variations, according to recent analysis from ABI Research:

  • North America: Leads in deployments; but in many cases, the region employs the wrong business plan of free consumer access and free infrastructure; consolidating incumbent service providers view municipal Wi-Fi as a competitive threat.
  • Europe: Mobile-oriented rather than PC-oriented; incumbents initially resisted municipal Wi-Fi but now recognize in-building limitations and are incorporating it within service bundles for nomadic broadband Internet access, or as a way to compete out of region.
  • Asia-Pacific: Status varies widely, but rapid uptake in advanced countries such as South Korea is resulting in innovative applications and the development of new end-user devices to leverage municipal Wi-Fi.
  • Emerging Regions: Equipment costs remain prohibitive; there is interest in the technology, but compared with more basic services such as electricity, funding is a challenge; these regions are likely to be late adopters.

ABI Research vice president and research director Stan Schatt believes that there are key financial benefits that should be included within the municipal Wi-Fi business case. "Wireless surveillance systems, for example, will provide financial returns by helping prevent possible terrorist attacks, decreasing overall crime, improving traffic flow, and even boosting tourism by creating stable communities," he explains.

Once technology, business, and cost issues are resolved, nations will benefit from this simple and low-cost broadband Internet access technology, consequently broadening the range of the networked service.

Municipal Wireless, a recent report from ABI Research, examines the current state of municipal Wi-Fi networks – assessing technology evolution, current market challenges, and possible solutions. It forms part of ABI Research's Wi-Fi Research Service.

SOURCE: ABI Research