Ericsson [NASDAQ:ERIC] has achieved a 'first' and it will improve the world's remote areas. Ericsson combined a
GSM base station and
satellite transmission in a
solar-powered site, enabling
Cambodian mobile operator
Star-Cell to expand its network coverage in remote areas. The solution offers
affordable communications for all and is based on Ericsson's energy-optimized, main-remote base-station.

The changes this satellite transmission feature can bring to remote areas is exciting as it provides affordable mobile-network coverage in remote areas where other transmission solutions are unavailable. Star-Cell has selected Ericsson's solution to expand network coverage and introduce
EDGE-based applications to enable
mobile health and
educational services for rural communities. This is vital for bridging the digital divide, as about
80 percent of the Cambodian population lives outside the main urban centers.

The GSM main-remote solution has a
lower environmental impact than standard base stations, consuming up to
50 percent less energy, and helps
lower total cost of ownership by reducing operating costs. This deployment follows a series of initiatives from Ericsson to optimize the energy efficiency of mobile networks by creating solutions that reduce environmental impacts and lower operator costs. These initiatives include:
BTS Power Savings features that put a network in stand-by mode during off-peak hours and
saves up to 15 percent of the network access energy consumption; the innovative site concept
Ericsson Tower Tube; biofuel-powered telecom sites; a hybrid solution using diesel and batteries that cuts network operating costs by up to 50 percent; and the
Solar Village Charger, co-developed with
Sony Ericsson. Ericsson delivered its first solar-powered sites in 2000 to
Maroc Telecom in
Morocco, and has so far provided more than 200 sites in
Africa, Southeast Asia and the
Americas.
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