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Hiroshi Okazaki Senior Vice President Communications and Information network Association of Japan

The 8th ATIE Forum. Current Status & Future Prospects of The Telecommunications Industry & ICT Infrastructure in Japan. Hiroshi Okazaki Senior Vice President Communications and Information network Association of Japan 30 November 2002, Hong Kong. e-Japan Priority Policy Areas.

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Hiroshi Okazaki Senior Vice President Communications and Information network Association of Japan

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  1. The 8th ATIE Forum Current Status & Future Prospects of The Telecommunications Industry & ICT Infrastructure in Japan Hiroshi Okazaki Senior Vice President Communications and Information network Association of Japan 30 November 2002, Hong Kong

  2. e-Japan Priority Policy Areas • Ultra High-Speed Networks to be built, with the goal of achieving within 5 years : • High-Speed Networks accessible by 30 million households • Ultra High-Speed Networks accessible by 10 million households • Broadcasting to be digitised and converge with telecommunications • e-Commerce to be facilitated by legislation for new rules • e-Government to be realised • High-Quality Human Resources to be nurtured To Become The World’s Most Advanced IT Nation within 5 Years.

  3. Evolution of Networks in Japan • Broadband Services • Mobile Services

  4. Broadband Services • 4.6 Million DSL Sub’s (as at Oct) • 1.8 Million CATV Sub’s (as at Sep) • 115 Thousand FTTH Sub’s (as at Sep) • e-Japan Thrust

  5. Subscribers to Broadband Internet Access Services Sep 02 Sep 99 Sep 00 Sep 01 Source: Ministry of Public Management, Home Affairs, Posts and Telecommunications

  6. Int’l Tariff Comparison for 24-Hr Connected ADSL Services (Yen/month) 500K 768K 1.5M 1.5M 8M 8M 768K 1.5M 512K 512K Upper Part: ISP access fee Lower Part: Communications fee 5,050 4,984 4,850 4,613 Tokyo 1 NTT Tokyo 2 NTT Tokyo Yahoo BB N.Y. 1 N.Y. 2 Paris London Geneva Dusseldorf Seoul Source: Ministry of Public Management, Home Affairs, Posts and Telecommunications

  7. Mobile Services • 72 Million Cellular Phones (as at Sep) • 79% or 57 Million are Internet-accessible • Function-richness

  8. Subscribers of Fixed and Mobile Phones M 80 The Mobile Phones exceeded the Fixed Phones. 70 60 Fixed + ISDN 50 PHS Fixed Mobile 40 30 20 10 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001

  9. No of Sub’s to IP Connection Services via Cellular Phones 80M 70 Non-IP 60 50 40 IP 30 20 10 0 Source: Ministry of Public Management, Home Affairs, Posts and Telecommunications

  10. Advanced Cellular Phone Functions in Japan

  11. Camera-Equipped Mobile Phones • The First camera-equipped model launched in Nov 2001, contributing to revenue to Sharp and J-Phone. • 53.6% of J-Phone sub’s use camera-type phones as at end of October 2002. • 33.7% of Mobile Phones have cameras built-in. • Camera phones instead of digital cameras

  12. Diagram-11 Current Status of FOMA and Measures for Improvement

  13. Carriers’ Business Strategies • 3G Mobile Service • Migration to IP Technologies • IPv6 • Faster Broadband Access

  14. Commercialisation Plan of 3G Services 2001 2002 2003 W-CDMA 97%+ NTT DoCoMo Major cities for 60% of Pop’n Introductory service 90% Tokyo Area Osaka, Nagoya For 99% of Pop’n Summer J-Phone Postponed Osaka, Nagoya Tokyo Area cdma2000 KDDI au CDMA2000 1X 2GHz 100% CDMA2000 1X 800MHz

  15. Mobile Carriers in Japan KDDI Japan Telecom

  16. Carriers’ Business Strategies • 3G Mobile Service • Migration to IP Technologies • IPv6 • Faster Broadband Access

  17. Features of IPv6 • Virtually unlimited number of addresses • IPv4: Total 4.3B IPv6:3.4X1028 • Security function is standard • Authentication in EC etc., secured traffic • Framework for QoS guarantee (flow label): • Stream data (voice, video) • Easy configuration by Plug&Play • IP enabled information appliance • Multicasting is standard • one-to-many, conversion of broadcasting and communications • Interconnection with Mobile Network • Seamless interworking between fixed network and mobile network via Mobile IP

  18. Vendors’ Trends • Migration to IP-related • business • IPv6 technologies • Concentrated Investment in • Mobile Business • 3G Mobile Service

  19. Vendors’ Alliance for 3G (W-CDMA) Mar/99 : Joint venture for development & marketing of infrastructure Siemens NEC Matsushita(Panasonic) Aug 01: Joint development of mobile terminals Evolium Alcatel Fujitsu Joint venture estab. in Jun 00 to develop infrastructure Sony Ericsson Mobile Sony Ericsson Joint Venture estab. In Oct 00 for mobile terminal business

  20. CIAJ’s Direction CIAJ will work together: • with not only vendors of network infrastructure equipment & terminals, but also ISPs and other service providers and also corporate network users, • with our govt departments and agencies, and • with your organisations • to create new business models and proliferate advanced use of ICT technologies and applications, • to formulate policy proposals for presentation to our govt to achieve appropriate business environment, and • to contribute to the economic development in East Asia region for our mutual benefits

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