Title: GEANT2, APAN, TEIN23
1GEANT2, APAN, TEIN2/3 South Asia Feasibility
Study
George McLaughlin, APAN Vice-Chair
Coordinator, TEIN3 South Asia Feasibility
Study SA-SIG meeting Kathmandu, Nepal, 14th
August 2008
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3- Todays Topology
- 25 POPs
- Hybrid structure
- 11600km of dark fibre
- Multiple 10Gbps paths
- Global connections to other RE networks
- 15 Connectivity providers
- Drivers
- Technology
- Cost reduction
- User demand
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6What is TEIN2?
- Intra-Asia regional network
- with Asia-Europe intercontinental links (both
trans-Siberian and Indian Ocean) - Funded by 10million Euros from European
Commission contributions from Asian partner
countries - TEIN2 programme aims to
- build and operate a regional network
- promote network usage through catalysing
applications - train technical staff in developing countries
- reduce the digital divide
7TEIN2 Topology - January 2008
Partner EconomiesAustralia (AARNet) China
(CERNET)Hong Kong SAR Indonesia (ITB) Japan
(MAFFIN, NICT, NII) Korea (NIA) Malaysia
(MDC) Philippines (ASTI) Singapore
(SingAREN) Thailand (ThaiREN) Vietnam (VinaREN)
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8Next Phase TEIN3
- TEIN2 launched in June 2006
- Around 30million users and 4,000 institutions in
11 countries now connect to TEIN2 via their NRENs - European Commission has approved funding for
follow-on (TEIN3) program to end 2011 - Intention to extend to South Asia (subject to
feasibility study) potential new partner
countries are Bangladesh 7, Bhutan, India 2,
Nepal, Pakistan 6, Sri Lanka (feasibility study
kick-off meeting 13-14 May) - Further support for application development
- Transfer TEIN3 programme to Asian ownership
- Plan for TEIN4
9Timezones and Populations
TEIN2 Member countries represent 1/3 of the
worlds population in a timezone range spanning
only 3 hours TEIN3 Potential member countries
represent almost 60 of the worlds population in
a timezone range spanning only 5 hours Small
timezone range is critical for interactive
collaboration
10TEIN3 Work Package 5South Asia Feasibility Study
- One of the key objectives of TEIN3 is to extend
the TEIN network and programme to South Asia - To this end, a feasibility study (SAFS) is being
undertaken in conjunction with the prospective
South Asian partners - Seven countries were identified for inclusion in
the SAFS - Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal,
Sri Lanka, Pakistan - The study is assessing
- the status and prospects for research and
education networking in the target countries - the role that TEIN3 could play to assist the
countries, and - the obligations of the target countries of
participation in TEIN3
11Areas of Study (1)
- Current status of research and education
networking and plans - Draw together relevant studies analyses
undertaken or underway, augmented with
information about capabilities, plans and needs
provided by participants. Investigate national
international networking infrastructures
organisational structures, also user communities
and current and potential applications that could
be supported via TEIN3
12Areas of Study (2)
- Telecommunications market assessment
- Analyse regulatory and telecommunications market
conditions to assess the feasibility, available
technologies, supplier capabilities and potential
costs of connection to TEIN3 - Undertake a comprehensive RFI for international
capacity to gain a good insight into
capabilities, costs and potential topologies
13Areas of Study (3)
- TEIN3 participation assessment
- Assess the benefits, costs and modalities for
each target country of participating in the TEIN3
programme - Judge against the state of national readiness to
benefit from the programme - Assess what TEIN3 can offer in terms of support
towards connectivity, applications development,
and human capacity development - Take account of the needs of each country and
what can be afforded from within the TEIN3
funding envelope
14Areas of Study (4)
- Sustainability
- Lesson learnt from other studies needs to be
addressed from the outset - TEIN3 is contracted to end 2011, after that date
significant European funding support cannot be
assumed. - Need for target countries to discuss with their
governments the principle of long term and
increasing commitments to support continued
participation. - Â
152008 Roadmap
- 13-14 May 2008 SAFS Kick-off meeting, Singapore
- Introducing TEIN2/3, participant presentations,
NREN data collection analysis, determine action
items - 11-12 August 2008 2nd SAFS meeting, Kathmandu
- International capacity offerings RFI review, cost
sharing model, user applications survey,
preliminary SAFS report - Early December 2008 3rd SAFS meeting,
Vientienne, Laos - Feasibility Study report, indicative funding
proposals to partners - Early 2009
- EC reviews Feasibility Study results, South Asian
Partners decide whether to join TEIN3
162009 Roadmap
- Q1 Joiners participate in TEIN3 Technical
Committee meeting - Q1 Q2 TEIN3 South Asia Connectivity Tender
- Q3 Q4 TEIN3 South Asian partners connected to
TEIN3 network
17Participation
- Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Pakistan
all signed letters of endorsement and
participated in the Kick-off meeting - Bhutan participated in the 2nd SAFS meeting
- NATO is currently exploring the connection of
Afghanistan in an extension of the Virtual Silk
Road. The intention is to cooperate with NATO
and have NATO participate in SAFS meetings - The World Band participated in the 2nd SAFS
meeting exploring potential synergies. WB
catalysing NREN development in Bangladesh - TransPac/IRNC participated in the 2nd SAFS
meeting, building on the collaboration already
started with the Pakistan/Internet2 connection - Interactions with the Asian Development
Bank/SASEC Information Superhighway project
(involving BT, BD, IN, NP)
18Initial data collection
- Reps from each country identified (from
Government and NREN) - Letters of endorsement to participate provided
from Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and
Pakistan - Comprehensive survey initiated covering (for each
country) - Geographic indicators
- Economic indicators
- Telecommunications/Internet indicators including
international capacity - NREN indicators including funding, staffing, user
community, capacity and traffic, and services
offered
19International Capacity RFI Objective
- To test the market in the target countries of
South Asia - Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka
(Bhutan not included this round) - More specifically to test for International
connection capability and offerings - between the South Asian countries
- between South Asian countries and TEIN2 PoPs
- between South Asian Countries and GEANT2 PoPs
- To determine network topologies that make sense
based on suppliers indicative offerings and
indicative costs for these
20Schematic of offers
Beijing
Copenhagen
Nepal
London
Pakistan
Bangladesh
Paris
India
Hong Kong
Frankfurt
Milan
Sri Lanka
Vienna
Singapore
Madrid
21Summary
- Positive interaction among partners
- Telecommunications market and competition
improving - Started to identify applications that are low
hanging fruit that will illustrate the value of
the network - Continue to identify current and potential
collaborations between South Asian partners and - other South Asian partners
- other TEIN2/3 partners
- European collaborators
- Other collaborations esp US
22Applications and Collaborations Sub-study
- A sub-study framework has been developed and
documented following feedback from participants
before, during and after the Kick-off meeting - A high degree of commonality between partners was
established in the areas of collaboration tools,
digital libraries, and telehealth - Parvati Dev, with support from South Asian
practitioners, has agreed to lead the development
of a roadmap for telehealth in South Asia - Surveys were undertaken on collaboration tools,
digital libraries and other collaborations
23Collaboration Tools
24Digital Libraries
25Other discipline collaborations
26Engaging User communities
27International Research for Prevention and
Mitigation of Meteorological Disasters in
Southeast Asia
Collaborating countriesJapanIndonesiaPhilippin
esThailandCambodiaLaosVietnamIndiaBangladesh
KoreaSingaporeChinaMalaysia
- Risk of high-impact weather is increasing due to
- economic development and urbanization
- global warming and climate change
- Probability information obtained using new
techniques made based on sophisticated collection
of earth observation data and high capacity
networks is a critical to the development of
decision support tools - Research environment is rapidly changing due to
- growth of computer power
- improvement of internet infrastructure
- refer Philippines typhoon prediction example
28Earth Observation Applications
- (1) Crops Yield Forecasting Rice, Sugar cane,
Rubber, Palm, Cassava - (2) Natural Resources Monitoring Management
Forest and Parks - (3) Agricultural Land Reform, Land-use,
Land-cover, Public Land - (4) Flood Preparedness, Monitoring, Mitigation,
Assessment - (5) Water Reservoir Dams and Irrigation
- (6) Draught Prediction and Water Management
- (7) Illicit crop monitoring
- (8) GIS development
- (9) Geo-spatial Data Sets
- (10) Image Intelligence and National Security
New applications focused on national economic
value impact