Via Ericson
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- City populations grow by 7,500
people per hour and mobile data traffic is expected to grow ten times by
2019, increasing the need for sustainable lighting and enhanced mobile
capacity and coverage in cities
- New connected
street lighting model solves two issues simultaneously: offering city
officials an innovative way to afford next generation energy efficient
LED lighting to meet sustainability goals, and enabling network
operators to offer improved city-wide mobile broadband and app coverage
- Called
"Zero Site" by Ericsson, connected lighting solution integrates telecom
equipment into light poles enabling telecom operators to improve mobile
network performance while reducing urban clutter
- Citizens
will benefit from improved mobile network coverage for data
communications and enhanced safety with brighter, well lit streets
Ericsson
(NASDAQ:ERIC) and Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), the global
leader in lighting, have jointly launched an innovative new connected
LED street lighting model. The partnership solves two major issues that
cities are facing today: providing citizens with improved network
performance in dense urban areas as well as high quality, public
lighting that is energy efficient.
Philips and
Ericsson combine the benefits of mobile connectivity and LED lighting in
a ''lighting-as-a-service'' model for cities. It allows city
authorities to offer space within their connected lighting poles to
network service providers for mobile broadband infrastructure.
Philips
will now offer cities LED street lighting that can include mobile
telecoms equipment from Ericsson. Mobile operators working with Ericsson
for mobile broadband infrastructure will be able to rent space in the
poles. In this way, mobile network operators will be able to improve
data coverage and capacity for citizens, resulting in enhanced mobile
broadband services. The model also accelerates the payback time for city
infrastructure, by making the up-front costs of installing and managing
these systems more affordable, so reducing the strain on city budgets.
Philips
LED street lighting can generate energy savings of 50 to 70 percent,
with savings reaching 80 percent when coupled with smart controls - as
validated by a study conducted by The Climate Group in 12 of the world's
largest cities. The study also showed that citizens prefer the white
light of LED lighting, citing a greater sense of safety and improved
visibility compared to the orange glow of traditional high pressure
sodium systems.
Ericsson President and CEO Hans
Vestberg says: "This is a tremendous solution using ICT and partnerships
to address the megatrend of urbanization. City populations are
increasing at the rate of 7,500 people per hour, but our world is not
geographically expanding. Meanwhile, our ConsumerLab research shows that
internet connectivity is one of the top five factors for satisfaction
in city life. This Zero Site solution is the kind of innovation that
offers a way for people to succeed in the Networked Society."
Frans
van Houten, President and CEO of Philips, says: "This new connected LED
street lighting model is another example of us bringing the Internet of
Things to life and demonstrates the capabilities of light beyond
illumination. We are offering lighting as a service that scales with a
city's needs and enables city officials to offer their citizens a more
connected, energy efficient and safer urban environment, while
preserving existing budgets and resources to improve the livability of
their city."
To meet the demand for coverage and
capacity, mobile operators need to improve, densify and add many more
radio cell sites in dense areas. The new connected street light pole,
designed to house Ericsson's cutting edge suite of small cell products,
offers network operators new possibilities to find the right site
location. It will also help to scale the deployment of mobile broadband
technology beyond traditional sites - a key enabler for evolving
heterogeneous networks.