LPWAN Market in Southeast Asia, 2016
LPWAN Market in Southeast Asia, 2016
Growing Market but MNOs will Require Careful Strategic Planning
29-Dec-2017
Asia Pacific
$1,500.00
Special Price $1,125.00 save 25 %
Description
Low Power Wide Area Network (LPWAN) technology will account for a significant share of Internet of Things (IoT) connections globally by 2020. This will be at the expense the fragmented M2M. With LPWAN being implemented by both mobile network operators (MNOs) and non-telcos, MNOs will require careful planning due to increasing competition and upcoming Cellular Internet of Things (CIoT) and Massive Internet of Things (MIoT) that will all address the IoT market concurrently.
In the interim, the IoT market will be dominated by proprietary technologies that meet the immediate requirements of being low cost, ultra power-efficient, and long range, which currently mobile cellular cannot address in a cost-effective way.
MNOs are increasingly realizing that experience in delivering connectivity services, regardless of the technology, supports their credentials for enterprises seeking nationwide or regional IoT partners. This is because no one technology will serve all the different IoT applications equally. However, in the case of LPWAN, end-to-end solutions required to drive the market are clearly lacking. MNOs need to work more with end-to-end solutions providers, for example, Atilze, to offer more versatile and technology agnostic IoT solutions.
Successful implementation of LPWAN to solve challenges within Southeast Asian countries will require government intervention. Environmental, city, and agricultural use cases in particular will bring significant benefit to Southeast Asian countries but it will require government intervention and funding.
Implementing LPWAN alongside CIoT helps MNOs target gaps with cellular networks to reap early-to-market advantage and address low-power applications cost effectively. LPWAN is already capturing market share from CIoT in power and water telemetry, agriculture, building security, asset tracking, waste collection, pollution monitoring, and street lighting control, and parking. However, MNOs can leverage on CIoT in mobile and cross-border use cases as well as complex managed services once commercialized. MNOs can also leverage on CIoT technology to address the real-time and high-bandwidth use cases involving video.
Companies mentioned in this study include Agnov8, Circumtec, Connit, DHL, FedEx, Flashnet, Ingenu, KPN, KT, Libelium, LoRa, M1, NTT DoCoMo, SK Telecom, SemTech, Sigfox, Tele2, Telefonica, Telenor Connexion, Telia, Telstra, Three, Vodafone, and Weightless.
Key Issues Addressed
- What are key attributes of LPWAN solutions in the market?
- Are LPWAN networks a complement or threat to MNOs?
- Should MNOs implement LPWAN or wait for Cellular IoT or offer both?
- How can LPWAN networks solve challenges faced in Southeast Asian countries?
- How are LPWAN networks being implemented?
Table of Contents
Key Findings
Key Questions this Study will Answer
LPWAN Overview
LPWAN Overview (continued)
LPWAN Overview (continued)
LPWAN Solutions Addressed M2M Solution Gaps
LPWAN Solutions Addressed M2M Solution Gaps (continued)
LPWAN Being Implemented by Both MNOs and Non-telcos
Sigfox
LoRa
Ingenu
Weightless
NB-IoT and LTE-M
Not All Applications Require Cellular IoT
Not All MNOs are Opting for Cellular IoT
Trend #1—Dependency on the Agriculture Industry
Trend #2—Migration of Manufacturing from China to Southeast Asia
Trend #3—Forest Fires in Indonesia
Trend #4—Waste Management in Thailand
Trend #5—Plastic Waste in the Southeast Asian Oceans
Trend #6—Singapore and Southeast Asia’s Aging Population
Summary #1 of Challenges Faced Across Southeast Asia
Application #1—Manufacturing Industry Challenges
Application #1—Manufacturing Industry Challenges: Industry 4.0
Application #2—Power Utilities Industry Challenges
Application #2—Power Utilities Industry Challenges: Smart Utilities
Application #3—Smart City Challenges
Application #3—Smart City Challenges: Smart Cities
Application #4—Logistics Industry Challenges
Application #4—Logistics Industry Challenges: Infrastructure Upgrades
Application #5—Consumer Applications Challenges
Summary #2 of Challenges Faced Across Southeast Asia
LPWAN in Action—Agriculture (Smart Agriculture/Livestock Monitoring)
LPWAN in Action—Agriculture (Smart Agriculture/Livestock Monitoring) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Fishing Industry (ICT buoy)
LPWAN in Action—Facilities (Water Management)
LPWAN in Action—Facilities (Water Management) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Disaster Prevention (Detection of Landslide)
LPWAN in Action—Security (Children/Elder Monitoring)
LPWAN in Action—Security (Children/Elder Monitoring) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Industry (Vibration Sensor)
LPWAN in Action—Industry (Vibration Sensor) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Electricity (Equipment Inspection/Monitoring)
LPWAN in Action—Electricity (Equipment Inspection/Monitoring) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Local Government (Smart City)
LPWAN in Action—Local Government (Smart City) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Logistics (Container Location/Humidity Monitoring)
LPWAN in Action—Logistics (Container Location/Humidity Monitoring) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Transportation (Equipment Inspection/Monitoring)
LPWAN in Action—Transportation (Equipment Inspection/Monitoring) (continued)
LPWAN in Action—Retail (Vending Machine)
LPWAN in Action—Retail (Vending Machine) (continued)
Growth Opportunity 1—Manufacturing Logistics Services
Growth Opportunity 2—Consumer IoT Applications
Strategic Imperatives for Success and Growth
The Last Word—Key Takeaways
Legal Disclaimer
Partial List of Companies Interviewed
Acronyms
The Frost & Sullivan Story
Value Proposition—Future of Your Company & Career
Global Perspective
Industry Convergence
360º Research Perspective
Implementation Excellence
Our Blue Ocean Strategy
Popular Topics
No Index | No |
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Podcast | No |
Author | Mei Lee Quah |
Industries | Information Technology |
WIP Number | 9ABE-00-31-00-00 |
Is Prebook | No |