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THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT 2010, SESSION 1

THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

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Page 1: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWANDEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING

Jakarta, 10 June 2010APSAT 2010, SESSION 1

Page 2: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

•Background•Milestones of Indonesian satellite industry•Satellite Policy and Regulation•Roadmap of the Indonesian satellite infrastructure•Demand for Satellite capacity•Indonesian satellites•Foreign satellite licensed to operate in Indonesia•Conclusion

Page 3: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

•Indonesia is an archipelago country that best fit by satellite technology in term of coverage area for rural development•Statistics:

• Population : over 230 million• Area : about 1.9 million km2 (4.8% water) • Until 2009 Indonesia has :

• about 8.4 million telephone line (~3.65% teledensity) dan • 26.4 million FWA telephone line (~11.45% teledensity). • (40%) of the capacity is within the 10 (ten) big cities and only 0.2% is provided for

the rural areas. • About 21% of the villages have not yet connected with telecommunication

networks. • The mobile phone density is ~70.97% (163.68 million users)

•Satellite plays an important role in connecting the country and serving the unserved areas by terrestrial networks

Page 4: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

MID-LONG TERM ICT STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENT GOALS 2010 - 2014 (Gov. Decree No.5 year 2010)Reducing digital divide in Indonesia.

Number of provinces has a intensive competition readiness index: 49% of total 33 provinces in Indonesia, 51% of total 33 provinces has workable competition index.

Availability of ICT infrastructure and services in all vilages, border areas, outmost island, remote areas and non commercial areas to reduce blank spot areas.100% of universal access of internet and

telecommunications in all USO areas.Public TV and Radio’s coverage 88% of population.

Page 5: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

MID-LONG TERM ICT STRATEGIC DEVELOPMENT GOALS 2010 - 2014 (cont)

(Gov. Decree No.5 year 2010)Availability of modern ICT access and services

minimum target:Internet service user penetration rate: 50%.Broadband service user penetration rate: 30%.Digital TV service penetration: 35%Fiber Optic telecommunication backbone network

connecting between major islands: 100%Number of city / district capitals served by

broadband networks: 75% of total number of city/ district capitals (around 500 city/district capitals in Indonesia).

Page 6: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

ICT POLICY DIRECTION(Gov. Decree No.5 year 2010)

Restructure industries and regulators towards convergence.Optimalization of resources in development of ICT

infrastructure. Broadband infrastructure development.E-government implementationEnsuring data / information, network and services

interoperability and interconnectivity. Encouraging creatitivity and innovation in ICT sector. Improving ICT human resources development. Encouraging ICT utilization for economy and business sector.Improvement of co-ordination among related parties and

stakeholders.

Page 7: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

•1976: First PALAPA series (PALAPA-A1) satellite launched. Indonesia became the third country and the first developing country who own its own domestic satellite•1977: launching of PALAPA-A2•1983 – 1992: PALAPA-B series satellite launched•1996: PALAPA-C series launched•1997: Cakrawarta-1 (BSS) satellite launched•1999: Telkom-1 satellite launched•2005: Telkom-2 satellite launched•2007: First N-GSO experimental satellite launched (LAPAN-TUBSAT)•2009: PALAPA-D launched

Page 8: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

•Before 2005, it was realized the need to have space and satellite regulations in order to cope with the rapid development in this sector, taking into account the changes in Indonesian telecommunication industry structure.•In 2005 the first specific satellite management regulation: Ministrial Decree Number 13 Year 2005 regarding Telecommunication using the satellites) which amended by Ministrial Decree Number 37 Year 2006•Those two regulations began to regulate provision of licensing access to satellite in Indonesia, the usage of satellite orbital slot including its filing notification and coordination provisions to ITU.•It is realized that the licensing regulation need to be enhanced and more effective. Therefore, DG Postel are currently drafting new satellite regulation.

Page 9: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

Set of applicable laws and regulations for satellite:•Law No. 36/1999: Telecommunication Law•Govt. Regulation No. 52/2000: Telecommunication Provision•Govt. Regulation No. 53/2000: Spectrum management•Ministerial Decree No. 13/2005: Telecommunication Provision using satellites•Ministerial Decree No. 37/2006: amendment of No. 13/2005•Director General Postel Decree No. 357/2006: Licensing and Landing Right (for using foreign satellite) application

Page 10: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

Specific provisions in Ministerial Decree 13/2005 and 37/2006:•Foreign satellites need to have landing rights in order to operate within the territory of Indonesia•Foreign satellites need to pay for its frequency usage within the territory of Indonesia (BHP Frekuensi) with the principle of equal treatment with that of the Indonesian satellites•Principle of Reciprocity •Obligation for the operators to report to the government regarding its satellite usage plan for using Indonesian notified satellite filings to ITU.•The Minister through evaluation could withdraw and transfer the right of using such filings if the operator failed to comply with the regulations

Page 11: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

• A new satellite regulation is still being prepared which will replace the two Ministerial Decree

• More comprehensive provisions including:- Satellite ownership- Cooperation in operating a satellite- Orbital location strategy of usage- Rights and obligations mechanism- Rules and procedures to utilize the the orbital locations

and satellite filings registered by Indonesian Administration

- The Minister’s authority to grant, withdraw or re-assign the rights of using the Indonesian filings with its associated orbital locations and radio frequency spectrum

Page 12: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

SATELLITE IN NATIONAL ICT INFRASTRUCTURE :

Spesifik untuk Satelit

Infrastruktur ICT Core Plane

Backbone, Backhaul, Backup, Load sharing Akses Plane

Internet access Video: DTH, SNG, Surveillance Data access: ATM Mobile Satellite Service (MSS): emergency,

aeronautical, tracking, dll.

Satellite-Specific Information Services Navigation & Positioning Remote Sensing Imaging Weather Forecasting

2.5% - 5% dari total

kapasitas ICT infrastruktur

nasional

Page 13: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

THE ROADMAP CONSIST OF:

• SHORT AND MIDDLE TERM ACTIONS (2007-2010 ):Focused on the consolidation of practices before the

roadmap is established:• Developing in depth plan of Indonesian filings to the ITU• Consolidation and establishment of Indonesian satellite operators. • Launching new satellites (PALAPA-D and LAPANSAT)• Defining satellite system components that could be developed by

Indonesian industry.

• LONG TERM ACTIONS (2008 – 2021):• Improving national satellite capacity• Consolidated course of actions regarding orbital slot and spectrum• Research and development• Business environment• Financial Policy and Go-international• Strategy and Regulation

Page 14: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

2007 – 2021 projected demand for satellite capacity, baseline estimation (Source: Satellite Infrastructure Roadmap, ASSI-2007)

Page 15: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

No SATELIT NAME ORBITAL LOCATION

OPERATOR TXPDR

1 Telkom-1 108E TELKOM C-band = 24Ext.C-band = 12

2 Telkom-2 118E TELKOM C-band = 24

3 Garuda-1 123E PSN/ACeS Typical

4 PALAPA PACIFIC/AGILA-2 146E PSN C-band = 24Ext.C-band = 6Ku-band = 24

5 INDOSTAR-1 107.7E MCI S-band = 5

6 PALAPA-D 113E INDOSAT C-band = 24Ext.C-band = 11Ku-band = 5

7 PALAPA-C2 150.5E TELKOM/INDOSAT

C-band = 24Ext.C-band = 6Ku-band = 2Ext.Ku-band = 2

Page 16: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

Notes: •C-band licensed under PALAPA TELKOM series (108E and 118E), PALAPA-D, PALAPA-C2 and PALAPA-PACIFIC/AGILA (146E) -- C-band including Ext-C band•Ku-band licensed under PALAPA PACIFIC/AGILA by PSN, PALAPA D (113E) by INDOSAT, PALAPA-C2 (150.5E)•S-band licensed under INDOSTAR-1 and INDOSTAR-2 (107.7E)•L-band licensed under PSN/AceS (123E)

Year / Band

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

C-band 68 36 52 36 52 36 52 36 87 36

Ku-band Null Null 24 36 24 36 24 36 29 36

S-band 5 30 5 30 5 30 5 30 15 30

L-band 28 0,2 28 0,2 28 0,2 28 0,2 28 0.2

Page 17: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

Earth Station accessing foreign-based satellite licenses: up to June 2010• Number of Earth Fixed Station licenes accessing other foreign-based satellites : 120 E/S• Number of VSAT Earth Station licenses accessing other foreign-based satellites : 292 VSAT E/S• Number of Earth Mobile Station licenses accesing other foreign-based satellites : 1748 Mobile E/S

•(i.e. Inmarsat, Iridium, Orbcomm)

Year / Band

2006 2007 2008 2009 2010No of

TXPDRBW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

No of TXPDR

BW per TXPDR (MHz)

C-band Null Null 11 36 12 36 14 36 87 36

C-band Null Null 1 33 1 33 1 33 1 33

Ku-band Null Null 4 48 4 48 4 48 29 36

Ku-band Null Null Null Null 4 36 4 36 4 36

Ka-band Null Null Null Null Null Null 4 57,375 4 57,375

Page 18: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

REGULATION: Indonesia licensed telecommunication provider or subscribing broadcasting body shall have a landing right in order to provide service using a foreign satellite in Indonesia

REQUIREMENTS:-Reciprocal principle: similar opportunity to Indonesian satellite provider to provide service in the subject country

-Complete all the necessary satellite coordination with all the Indonesian terrestrial and satellite networks

-Guarantee that no harmful interference will be caused to the existing and planned Indonesian terrestrial and satellite networks

Page 19: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

Based on the above, some of satellite bandwidth in Indonesia are fulfilled by the foreign satellite.

No. Notifying Administration

Number of satellites providing service in

Indonesia

1. China 11

2. US 8

3. UK 2

4. Japan 2

5. Holland, Germany,

1

6 Malaysia, Singapore, Tonga, Thailand

1

Page 20: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

• Launch new satellites by Indonesian operators- financial constraints to launch new satellites.

- very difficult to find orbital slot location with appropriate spectrum and coverage areas (particularly C, Ku-band).

• Leasing satellite capacity from foreign satellites- landing rights procedure required

- completed coordination with Indonesian satellite and terrestrial networks shall be required.

• Collaboratively procurement new satellites with other satellite operators in the region or in the world• Shall have approval from Government (DG Postel and Minister of

Communications and IT).• Need to establish the roles and responsibility on each party including

the roles and responsibilities. • Should comply with long term ICT and spectrum policy and planning.

Page 21: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT

1.Demand for satellite capacity is still high in Indonesia2.Satellite policy and regulation in Indonesia is established to encourage fair competition among satellite operators and industries, so that the demand for satellite capacity could be fulfilled3.More satellite capacity is needed especially for covering the rural areas where demand for connectivity is raising and the availability of terrestrial telecommunication services are difficult4.Satellite will never be banished from realm of Indonesian telecommunication infrastructure despite more and more terrestrial networks are built to connect the nation

Page 22: THE NEED AND AVAILABILITY OF SATELLITE BANDWIDTH IN INDONESIA Mr. DENNY SETIAWAN DEPUTY DIRECTOR SPECTRUM POLICY AND PLANNING Jakarta, 10 June 2010 APSAT