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Arancha Fernández Romero Standardization Policy Division

This session focuses on defining and evaluating the standardization gap, and highlights ITU-T activities aimed at bridging the gap. The session will discuss disparities in access, representation, and technology, as well as participation and capacity building.

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Arancha Fernández Romero Standardization Policy Division

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  1. WSIS 2009 Bridging Standardization Gap Session Strategies to decrease the Standardization Gap Arancha Fernández Romero Standardization Policy Division ITU - Telecommunication Standardization Bureau

  2. Defining the standardization gap Evaluating the gap ITU-T activities to bridge the standardization gap Outline

  3. The Standardization Gap • Disparities in the ability to access, implement, contribute to and influence international ICT standards (ITU Recommendations) • Disparities in the representation of developing countries relative to developed countries, cause and manifestation of: • Persistence of the wider digital divide in ICTs (among different regions and groups within the society) • Unequal access to technology and the ability to use that technology

  4. Digital divide standardization gap & participation Standardization Gap & Poor Access to Technologies Digital Divide _______________________ Participation & Capacity Building

  5. Bridging the standardization gap • PP-02 (Res. 123), WTSA-04/08 Resolution 44, 17 & 54, WTDC-06 Resolution 47 • ITU-T mandated to bridge the standardization gap between developing and developed countries • Action plan established: • Improve standards making capabilities • Assisting in enhancing efforts in standards applications • Human resource building • Flagship group for bridging the gap • BSG fundraising

  6. Meassuring the standardization gap • Number of downloads of ITU-T Recs from website site • Number of TIES users • Number of Sector Members and Associates • Number of chairmen and rapporteurs from developing countries • Number of participants in meetings and contributions by country

  7. TIES and ITU-T Members distribution Need for more participation

  8. Participation in ITU-T meetings and SGs Need for more participation

  9. Participation: contributions

  10. Standardization Development Ladder • Bridging the standardization development gap requires a sequence of steps, depending on the level of: • economic development • local manufacturing and R&D capability • previous engagement with ITU • These steps can be conceptualised in terms of a “Ladder of Standardization Development”

  11. National training and Capacity-building in use ITU Recommendations Growing use of ITU Recommendations Standardization Development Ladder (1) • Capacity-building • to build a national resource base of qualified engineers able to implement Recommendations • ITU centres of excellence Growing use of ITU Recs • can be measured in terms of sales or downloads of Recommendation • should help to reduce costs and promote inter-operability

  12. Entering proposals at WTSA on future study questions and work programmes Nominating representatives as study group chairs, vice - chairs. rapporteurs , focus group chairs etc Submit contributions at Study Groups and related meetings Attracting ITU meetings and/or regional groups (Res 54) Going to Study Groups and related meetings ITU Sector and Associate Membership National training and capacity - building in use of ITU Recommendations Growing use of ITU Recommendations Standardization Development Ladder (2) Entering proposals to WTSA Determining ITU-T study questions to drive the work of the Study Groups. Contributing to ITU-T SGs“Contribution-driven” philosophy: to enter into the process and shaping future standards

  13. Entering proposals at WTSA on future study questions and work programmes Nominating representatives as study group chairs, vice - chairs. rapporteurs , focus group chairs etc Giving contributions at Study Groups and related meetings Attracting ITU meetings and/or regional groups (Res 54) Going to Study Groups and related meetings ITU Sector or Associate Membership National training and capacity - building in use of ITU Recommendations Growing usage of ITU Recommendations Standardization Development Ladder (2) Entering proposals E It’s all about climbing the Standardization Development Ladder It’s all about ENGAGING with ITU and its membership, by getting more involved Nominating reps N G Giving inputs Attracting meetings A Going to meetings G ITU Membership I National Training N Growing Usage G

  14. ITU-T activities to bridge the standardization gap

  15. The Future Internet (April 2009) Distributed Computing: Utilities, Grids & Clouds (March 2009) Standardization Activities for Intelligent Transport Systems (October 2008) NGNs and energy efficiency (August 2008) Technical aspects of Lawful Interception (May 2008) … ICTs and Climate Change (December 2007) FG SG5 Tech Watch briefing reports Identify new/emerging technologies with a view to identify areas for new standardization work, such as: http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/techwatch/index.html

  16. Technical Flyers • Numbering, Naming and Addressing • VoIP • QoS & QoE • NGN • ASON • B-PON ; CWDM; DSL ; G-PON • Optical Fibres and Cables • OTN ; OTS • Synchronization over packet networks • Accessibility • H.264 ; H.350 • Multimedia Communications • ASN.1 • Security • IMT-2000 http://www.itu.int/oth/T0B04/en

  17. Provides background information on the relevance of ITU-T Recommendations for developing countries • Useful tool to develop strategies able to meet the requirements of the PP-06 and WTSA-08 Resolutions

  18. Familiarity with Recs published by ITU-T Relevance and usefulness of Recs to developing countries Difficulties for implementation and suggestions to increase participation by developing countries Regional standardization “block” meetings to facilitate participation from the regions Seminars and Workshops in the regions Contributions and proposal for improvement as inputs to WTSA-08 resulted in revised and new Resolutions The ITU-T Questions

  19. Workshops, seminars and other events Remote collaboration and participation Regional groups Block Meetings Flagship Group Increasing participation and collaboration

  20. in Gva in Gva out out 50 100 90 40 80 70 30 60 50 20 40 30 Gva 10 20 10 2002 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2003 Workshops trend N. OfDays % Days

  21. Admission of Sector Members from developing countries in the work of the ITU-T at reduced fee resolves … to encourage the adoption of the necessary measures to enable new members from developing countries to join ITU-T …and other groups within the ITU-T, (consider financial contributions applied in the BDT) instructs the Director of the TSB to propose to the Council to consider the admission of such category in the work of theITU-T …. and to include its consideration of this matter in the council work for the preparation of the 2010 PP conference WTSA-08 New Resolution 74 Note: These Sector Members from Developing Countries shall not be affiliated in any way to any Sector Member of a Developed Country, and be limited to those Sector Members of Developing Countries classified by the UNDP as low income per capita Country, not exceeding (……US$).

  22. Free access to ITU-T Recommendations online (since 1 January 2007) TIES access (password protected) to meeting documents etc Other electronic tools, e.g., correspondence groups, informal FTP areas on website, Forums etc Remote participation via webinar (GotoMeeting, GoToWebinar, Webex) Remote collaboration and participation: online tools

  23. Regional GroupsSupport within available (or otherwise contributed resources) and on a case-by-case basis the creation of regional groups Resolution 54 : Creation of regional groups ITU-T RGs: SG2 SG3 SG6 SG12

  24. Permanent regional standards awareness Training on standardization in the regions, producing manuals and audio/video material Support and measure participation in ITU-T activities (academia, private sector…) Translate ITU-T material Support remote or direct participation of experts in ITU-T activities Creation of regional Testing & Calibration labs Invite regulators to put in place mechanisms to consider international standards when preparing national technical regulations Flagship Group Americas(Res. 44 Annex 1 prg 4)

  25. Cooperation with regional organizations: CITEL, RCC, APT, ATU, LAS,… One per year per region in the same place in the same time in their regions Topics decided by the membership and transversal to any ITU-T Study Groups Official status as generator of contributions to parent study groups TSB secretarial support, EDH facilities as any other SG meeting ITU-T “Block” meetings in the region

  26. conc lus i on ITUing… • Increasing the use of ITU recs, membership • Capacity building, training • Increasing participation in SGs, management, workshops, meetingsand number of contributions • Contributing to ITU work plans Bridge the Standardization Gap

  27. Thank you www.itu.int/ITU-T/gap tsbspd@itu.int tsbpromo@itu.int

  28. Extra Material

  29. WSIS Actions and ITU World Summit on Information Society, Tunisia, 2005

  30. The concept of Opportunity Index (OI) to measure the information society InfodensityICT capital [telecommunication network infrastructures (fixed, mobile, internet) and of ICT, including equipment (cables, routers, etc), disparity • Info-use • Three indicators: • Internet users every 100 inhabitants • PC owners every 100 inhabitants • Houses and TV sets proportion

  31. ITU Centre of Excellence 5 Prog/ 5 Partners Worldwide Networks R.O.Korea Pakistan Thailand Malaysia Iran Technical Awareness Regulatory IssuesBusiness Management Rural connectivity Spectrum management 5 Prog./ ? Partners 4 Prog./5 partners To be defined 3 PROGRAMS OAS/CITELIDB BELL SOUTH IIT CTU Telecom Policies New Telecom Techniques Regulatory Issues ICT based Business CoE ASP Tech.Awareness Policies & Reg. IssuesCorporate ManagementInternet Technologies Spect Man & Sup. Strategic ManagementTechnology TrendsRegulatory IssuesSpectrum managementInformation Techn. CoE ARB CoE AFR-F CoE AMS The ITU Centre of Excellence Network CISBranch CEEBranch CoE EUR+CIS 5 Prog./2 partners 6 Prog./2 partners Telecom Policies Regulatory Issues Business management New Technologies IP Awareness Rural Connectivity Regulatory Issues Business management New Technologies Spectrum Management Rural Connectivity SFM IIT ALCATEL IIT 5 Prog./3 partners CTO Airtel IIT Regulatory Issues Business management New Technologies Spectrum Management Rural Connectivity CoE Africa CoE AFR-E

  32. Workshops trend

  33. Meetings by regions

  34. Types of collaboration Same timesynchronous Different time asynchronous Ongoing collaboration project management tools, e-calendars, wall charts, shift-work groupware etc Face-to-face meetings meeting rooms, projection systems, tabletop computer, flip charts etc Same placeco-located Remote meetings remote collaboration tools, video/audio conferencing, IM/chat, telepresence, webcasts, virtual worlds etc Time-shift remote collaboration websites, forums, email, e-calendars, sharepoints, wikis, version control etc Different placeremote

  35. Segmenting the market

  36. To assist in bridging the standardization gap, especially for delegates from developing countries To provide training materials (archived on web) To make participation in short meetings more efficient (e.g. steering committees, seminars, rapporteur groups) To contribute in reducing carbon footprint Promoting remote participation

  37. ITU-T trial, launched by TSAG in Dec-07, to evaluate remote participation GoToMeeting: used extensively within ITU for short (>2 hours) meetings, with up to 30 participants GoToWebinar: used for covering Climate Change symposium in Kyoto, with up to 200 participants over 2 days (archived) - WebEx: one year trial offered by CISCO Remote participation

  38. Forum on "Implementation of decisions of the World Telecommunication Standardization Assembly-08 (WTSA-08)“, Accra, Ghana 16-17 June 2009 ITU Symposium on ICTs and Climate Change Quito, Ecuador 8-10 July 2009 Kaleidoscope event: Innovations for Digital Inclusion Mar del Plata, Argentina, 31 Aug-1 Sept. 2009 Workshop on Accessibility, Bamako, Mali (Planned) 13-15 Oct. 2009 Some coming ITU-T major events in developing countries

  39. …from the Questionnaire

  40. SG 2 3 5 9 11 12 13 ….. 17 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 n n+1 The BK,J matrix concept: any Q. any SG, “same time-same place” Q BE,3

  41. PROS: More participation of experts from the region: study, progress, approval process - “have a voice in global standards” Increase of contributions from the region Lower costs associated (travel/accomodation Region/Geneva) for regional experts Same TSB facilities available on site: regional presence Possibility to co-locate S-RBMs with ITU Forums or other events Potential increase of membership: sector’s promotion Reduce standardization gap and digital divide increase capacity building Possibility to reduce Study group meetings duration “Block” Meetings: Pros and Cons CONS: • TSB staff to move for one-two weeks • Funding / associated organizational costs • Risk to work on too much regional-oriented standards • Need to look for co-location with ITU Forums or other events

  42. Establishment Leadership Participation (Participation is open to any individual expert from a country which is a member of ITU who wishes to contribute to the work. This includes individuals who are also members of international, regional and national organizations. Participation in Regional Group should not be used as an alternative to ITU membership) General financing of Regional Group Financing of meetings Administrative support Meeting logistics Working language Deliverables (contributions from the countries of the region, reports, etc. to the parent study group) Approval of deliverables Regional Groups can establish their own rules of approval. Printing and distribution of deliverables Progress reports (Regional Group progress reports are to be provided to the parent study group meeting) Meeting announcements Working guidelines Working Methods Procedures

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