Two billion people online by end 2010

Access to mobile net­works avail­able to over 90% of world pop­u­la­tion 143 coun­tries offer 3G services

Geneva, 19 Octo­ber 2010 — ITU’s lat­est sta­tis­tics pub­lished today in The World in 2010: ICT facts and fig­ures reveal that the num­ber of Inter­net users world­wide dou­bled in the past five years and will sur­pass the two bil­lion mark in 2010. The num­ber of peo­ple hav­ing access to the Inter­net at home has increased from 1.4 bil­lion in 2009 to almost 1.6 bil­lion in 2010. The new data were released on the eve of World Sta­tis­tics Day, which will be cel­e­brated world­wide on 20 Octo­ber 2010.……

.….162 mil­lion of the 226 mil­lion new Inter­net users in 2010 will be from devel­op­ing coun­tries, where Inter­net users grow at a higher rate. By the end of 2010, 71% of the pop­u­la­tion in devel­oped coun­tries will be online com­pared to 21% of the pop­u­la­tion in devel­op­ing coun­tries. While in devel­oped coun­tries 65% of peo­ple have access to the Inter­net at home, this is the case for only 13.5% of peo­ple in devel­op­ing coun­tries where Inter­net access in schools, at work and pub­lic loca­tions is crit­i­cal. Regional dif­fer­ences are sig­nif­i­cant: 65% of Euro­peans are on the Inter­net, com­pared to only 9.6% of Africans.

With the rapidly increas­ing high-bandwidth con­tent and appli­ca­tions on the Inter­net, there is a grow­ing demand for higher-speed broad­band connections.

ITU con­sid­ers broad­band as a cat­a­lyst for growth. Recently, ITU and UNESCO launched the Broad­band Com­mis­sion for Dig­i­tal Devel­op­ment that aims to pro­mote the adop­tion of broadband-friendly prac­tices and poli­cies world­wide. ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré says, “Broad­band is the next tip­ping point, the next truly trans­for­ma­tional tech­nol­ogy. It can gen­er­ate jobs, drive growth and pro­duc­tiv­ity, and under­pin long-term eco­nomic com­pet­i­tive­ness. It is also the most pow­er­ful tool that we have at our dis­posal in our race to meet the Mil­len­nium Devel­op­ment Goals, the dead­line for which is now just five years away.”

Over the past year, there has been strong growth in fixed broad­band sub­scrip­tions. By the end of 2010, fixed broad­band pen­e­tra­tion will reach 8% glob­ally. But pen­e­tra­tion lev­els in devel­op­ing coun­tries remain low: 4.4 sub­scrip­tions per 100 peo­ple com­pared to 24.6 in devel­oped countries.

While high-speed Inter­net is still out of reach for many peo­ple in low-income coun­tries, mobile tele­phony is becom­ing ubiq­ui­tous, with access to mobile net­works now avail­able to over 90% of the global pop­u­la­tion. ITU’s new data indi­cate that among the esti­mated 5.3 bil­lion mobile sub­scrip­tions by the end of 2010, 3.8 bil­lion will be in the devel­op­ing world.

The Direc­tor of ITU’s Telecom­mu­ni­ca­tion Devel­op­ment Bureau, Sami Al Basheer said, “Mobile phone pen­e­tra­tion in devel­op­ing coun­tries now stands at 68% — higher than any other tech­nol­ogy before. These coun­tries have been inno­v­a­tive in adapt­ing mobile tech­nol­ogy to their par­tic­u­lar needs and will be able to draw even greater ben­e­fits from broad­band once ade­quate and afford­able access is available.”

In devel­oped coun­tries, growth in mobile sub­scrip­tions has slowed con­sid­er­ably dur­ing the past five years, with a year-on-year growth from 2009–2010 of only 1.6%. In those coun­tries, the mobile mar­ket is reach­ing sat­u­ra­tion lev­els with on aver­age 116 sub­scrip­tions per 100 inhabitants.

At the same time, sub­scrip­tions to IMT2000/3G ser­vices have increased from 72 mil­lion in 2005 to 940 mil­lion in 2010. As many as 143 coun­tries are offer­ing IMT2000/3G ser­vices com­mer­cially, up from 95 coun­tries in 2007. Over the past year, mobile broad­band has expe­ri­enced steep growth, espe­cially in Europe and the United States, and some coun­tries have started to offer com­mer­cial ser­vices at even higher broad­band speeds, mov­ing to next gen­er­a­tion wire­less platforms.

The trend from voice to (mobile) data appli­ca­tions is reflected in the grow­ing num­ber of SMS, or text mes­sages sent, which tripled over the past three years to reach a stag­ger­ing 6.1 tril­lion in 2010. In other words, close to 200 000 text mes­sages are sent every second.

Over­all, the price of ICT ser­vices is falling, but high-speed Inter­net access remains pro­hib­i­tively expen­sive, espe­cially in low-income devel­op­ing coun­tries. In 2009, an entry-level fixed (wired) broad­band con­nec­tion cost on aver­age 190 PPP$ (Pur­chas­ing power par­ity in USD) per month in devel­op­ing coun­tries, com­pared to only 28 PPP$ in devel­oped coun­tries. Mobile cel­lu­lar ser­vices are much more afford­able, with an aver­age monthly cost of 15 PPP$ in devel­op­ing coun­tries com­pared to around 18 PPP$ in devel­oped coun­tries. The rel­a­tive price for ICT ser­vices (espe­cially broad­band) is high­est in Africa, the region with the low­est income lev­els. The region lags behind when it comes to broad­band access. Although sub­scrip­tions are increas­ing, a pen­e­tra­tion rate of less than 1 per cent for fixed broad­band illus­trates the huge chal­lenges that per­sist to increase access to high-speed, high-capacity Internet.

The United Nations des­ig­nated 20 Octo­ber 2010 (20–10-2010) as World Sta­tis­tics Day. The cel­e­bra­tion of World Sta­tis­tics Day acknowl­edges the impor­tance of national and inter­na­tional sta­tis­tics and aims to strengthen the aware­ness and trust of the pub­lic in offi­cial statistics.

Quoted from the Inter­na­tional Telecom­mu­ni­ca­tion Union

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