To meet increased demand for value-added services, Bharti, India, required an Ericsson Mobile Packet Backbone Network (M-PBN). Bharti Cellular operates throughout India using the Airtel brand. The operator is the leading GSM provider in the country with over 13 million subscribers, a 26 percent market share. End-user numbers and network traffic have both grown by 100 percent yearon- year. The Airtel Live portal, run using EDGE technology, now has more than 1 million active GPRS users.
Bharti quickly realized that there was a need to upgrade the IP infrastructure side of its network in order to maintain quality as the demand for value-added services was expected to continue rising. Bharti had an existing Ericsson GPRS system in 15 of its 23 provincial networks, spanning all of India, which the operator had managed itself since its launch in 2001. To expand these capabilities to meet predicted growth demands, Bharti agreed a Managed Services solution with Ericsson centered on developing a Mobile Packet Backbone Network (M-PBN).
The Managed Service and managed capacity framework allows Bharti, in cooperation with Ericsson, to plan, monitor, operate, expand, design and improve capacity. This solution supports both WCDMA and GSM, enabling seamless access across both networks via a common backbone and an efficient evolution path to all-IP. Ericsson designs high-quality customized internet protocol infrastructure to cater for projected network traffic.
Initially, the solution saw two primary M-PBN sites installed during late 2004, in Delhi and in Bangalore. Performance management capabilities were established to reduce subscriber concerns. Bhargab Mitra, Vice President for Sales Support and Technical Solution, Ericsson, describes the advantages of M-PBN: “The major challenge faced with Bharti’s system is competence development to bring stable and reliable service to the network. M-PBN achieved this because Ericsson used its reference design to call on its global service delivery organization to achieve the operator’s objectives.”