Entering the Zettabyte Era:
Satellite Operators Make the
Case For Smart Future Networks
European satellite operators
underlined the crucial role that
satellite plays in the roll-out
of future digital
infrastructures.
The European Satellite Operators
Association (ESOA), represented by its
Secretary General, Aarti Holla, and by
the CEO of SES, Karim Michel Sabbagh,
participated in a high-level meeting
between leading EU political and
business representatives in Venice.
Sabbagh, President and CEO of SES and
Member of the ESOA Board, spoke
alongside Italian Prime Minister Matteo
Renzi, European Commission
Vice-President Neelie Kroes, policy
makers from European Union member states
and CEOs of leading ICT companies at
“Digital Venice 2014”, an event
organised by the Italian Presidency.
Taking the floor to welcome the
Digital Venice initiative, Sabbagh noted
that the future Internet will be
dominated by video, demanding
high-quality services anytime, anywhere,
and on any device. “This causes an
unprecedented demand for capacity, with
Cisco forecasting an increase in annual
global IP traffic to more than a
Zettabyte – one thousand billion
Gigabytes – already in 2016”, Sabbagh
said. “As soon as Ultra-HD television
becomes mainstream, this will increase
even further and individual usage in
Europe could then require up to a
100-fold increase over today’s household
data capacity.”
“Can networks cope with this? Can
operators afford such traffic generating
minimal, if any, transport value? Is the
implied carbon footprint explosion
acceptable? Would citizens have equal
access to such services? The answer to
these questions is not obvious”, Sabbagh
said. “Satellite is an infrastructure
that has already reached the Zettabyte
era. With its unsurpassed universal
capacities and its unmatched economies
in one-to-many traffic, it can play a
central role in building an optimal,
smart and future-proof next-generation
network. I invite the attendees of
today’s Roundtable to cooperate on
hybrid satellite-terrestrial solutions
as they come at a fraction of the cost.
They help offload terrestrial networks
and redirect investments; they
accelerate the delivery of multi-play
benefits, allow much more efficient use
of spectrum resources and help avoid a
new digital divide.”
Aarti Holla, ESOA Secretary General,
speaking on a panel on the Digital
Single Market with DG CONNECT Deputy
Director General Roberto Viola, noted
the extreme cost-efficiency of satellite
in down-stream video delivery, as part
of the solution to intelligent network
management.
“Increasing HDTV penetration and the
emergence of Ultra HDTV, as seen in
recent transmissions from the FIFA World
Cup in Brazil, demonstrate the need to
develop partnerships and find
sustainable commercial solutions that
integrate satellite into the complex
networks required to deliver next
generation video”, Holla said. “This is
the only way that citizens will really
reap the benefits of video anytime,
anywhere and on any device.”