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India’s Data Consumption May Touch 25 GB/Month Per User By 2025: Ericsson

Total traffic is projected to triple, reaching 21 exabytes per month in 2025.

Passengers use smartphones at Mumbai Central railway station in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)
Passengers use smartphones at Mumbai Central railway station in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

Indians used about 12 GB data per month on average in 2019, the highest consumption globally, and this is expected to double to over the next five years, driven by affordable mobile broadband services and changing video viewing habits, according to telecom gear maker Ericsson.

Ericsson, in its Mobility Report for June 2020, said India's data traffic growth continued its upward trajectory and it remains the region with the highest usage per smartphone and per month.

Given that only 4% of households have fixed broadband, smartphones are the only way to access the internet in many cases.

“Total traffic is projected to triple, reaching 21 exabytes per month in 2025. This comes from two factors: high growth in the number of smartphone users, including growth in rural areas, and an increase in average usage per smartphone...,” Patrik Cerwall, Head of Strategic Marketing Insights and Executive Editor of the Ericsson Mobility Report, said on Tuesday.

The average traffic per smartphone is expected to increase to around 25 GB per month in 2025.
Patrik Cerwall, Head of Strategic Marketing Insights, Ericsson

He said that around 410 million smartphone users are expected to be added in India by 2025.

Global total mobile data traffic reached around 33 EB per month by the end of 2019, and is projected to reach 164 EB per month in 2025.

Cerwall said the largest share of traffic increase during the Covid-19 pandemic has been absorbed by fixed residential networks, which have experienced a 20-100% growth.

However, many service providers also noticed a spike in demand on their mobile network, he added.

Citing a recent study conducted by Ericsson Consumer Lab, he said 83% of the respondents from 11 countries had claimed that Information and Communications Technology helped them a lot to cope with the lockdown.

While 57% said they will save money for financial security, one-third plan to invest in 5G and an improved broadband at home to be better prepared for a potential second wave of Covid-19.

Ericsson's latest report noted that the average monthly mobile data usage per smartphone in India region continues to show robust growth, boosted by the rapid adoption of 4G.

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Low prices for mobile broadband services, affordable smartphones and people's changing video viewing habits have continued to drive monthly usage growth in the region.

Ericsson expects the global number of 5G subscriptions to top 190 million by the end of 2020, and 2.8 billion by the end of 2025.

By the end of 2025, 5G subscriptions are expected to account for around 30% of all mobile subscriptions at that time.

LTE (4G) will remain the dominant mobile access technology by subscription during the forecast period, it said.

It is projected to peak in 2022 at 5.1 billion subscriptions and decline to around 4.4 billion subscriptions by the end of 2025 as more subscribers migrate to 5G, it added.

In India, 18% mobile subscriptions are forecast to be 5G and 64% LTE (4G), and the remaining on 2G/3G in 2025.

Mobile broadband technologies accounted for 58% of mobile subscriptions in 2019, and this figure is predicted to reach 82% by 2025.

"The total number of mobile broadband subscriptions is set to exceed 1 billion by 2025. The number of smartphone subscriptions has increased to 620 million in 2019 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of 9%, reaching 1 billion by 2025," the report said.

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Ericsson anticipates that by 2030, up to $700 billion of 5G-enabled, business-to-business value could be addressed by service providers.

In India, the projected value of the 5G-enabled digitalisation revenues will be approximately $17 billion by 2030.

"5G is a platform for innovation. It enables new services for consumers, enterprises and industry, including large-scale IoT use cases. Healthcare, manufacturing, automotive and the energy/utilities sectors are among the biggest revenue generating opportunities for communications service providers in 5G," Cerwall said.

Ericsson Head of Network Solutions, South East Asia, Oceania and India Nitin Bansal said the key is to invest in 4G in India to excel in 5G.

"Here, private networks represent a very important first step and fundamental to building momentum in serving a wide array of 5G-enabled use cases. Mobile technology is an unmatched connectivity foundation for the digital transformation of any industry, and any product, anywhere in the world," he added.

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Ericsson has more than 93 commercial 5G agreements or contracts with unique communication service providers, of which 40 are live networks.

"We have the right 5G portfolio in place to enable our customers to deploy 5G networks in all main frequency bands globally in the fastest and most efficient way.

"This has been proven in live networks with the best performance results. Our Indian operators can benefit from Ericsson's global experience when they plan their 5G deployments in India," Bansal said.