But unlike the US search giant, which will directly take its ultrafast fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) drive across US cities, Sterlite will deliver super-fast fibre broadband connectivity at 20 to 50 Mbps speeds to urban homes through partner mobile operators.
“We will shortly showcase our FTTH broadband technology blueprint to
“Sterlite’s faster home
Its plan to partner with telcos comes at a time when mobile operators are increasingly focusing on data revenues to fuel future growth.
“A faster fibre broadband option along the lines of a ‘Google Fibre’ can be handy for incumbents Bharti
At present, Google’s ultra-fast fibre internet service is reportedly available in
Elaborating on Sterlite’s fibre broadband model, Agarwal said the company would deliver last mile broadband connectivity to an urban home by plugging its FTTH network to the nearest point of interconnect (PoI) of a partner mobile operator, which could be an exchange or base station.
Agarwal, however, agreed that Sterlite’s FTTH network expansion would hinge on telco demand for using its fibre-to-home technology. “We will ink revenue-sharing pacts with telco partners only after jointly assessing whether a particular urban neighbourhood is ready for fibre,” he said.
Under its build-to-demand approach, the company will extend last mile fibre optic internet connectivity to individual homes and residential high rises only after “it is assured of adequate demand for faster broadband services at the consumer end”.
Incidentally, Sterlite Technologies is a key optic fibre cable supplier for the Rs 21,000-crore national optic fibre network (NOFN) project that will be take high-speed internet to 2.5 lakh village blocks across the country. It has also secured contracts to supply such cables for a mega telecom network that BSNL is building for the armed forces.