Global mobile-phone subscribers hit 2B

Global mobile-phone subscribers hit 2B

There are now over 2 billion mobile subscribers around the world, an industry group reported Sunday.

The GSM Association's Wireless Intelligence service said in a news release that "the bulk of new growth now is coming from large, less well-developed markets such as China, India, Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Africa."

"The total number of mobile connections is now equivalent to nearly a third of the estimated world population of 6.5 billion," the Finnish group added.

As recently as 2002 the mobile industry celebrated reaching 1 billion subscribers, just 20 years after it was introduced, making it the fastest growing technology at that time. In the same year it overtook the fixed network and its growth has carried on unabated with the second billion coming in a record 3 years.

The GSM family of technologies, which includes W-CDMA, reaches its own milestone this month of 1.5 billion subscribers and it has 78% of the world market.

However, in many countries the cellular market is now maturing. There are several cases – such as Sweden, Italy, Austria, UK – where the market penetration is over 100% of the population. In these countries most of the interest is about people trading up to new phones and new network services, such as 3G.

Overall the cellular industry is expecting to ship around 750 million new phones this year. The cellular market is forecast to continue to grow at a high rate, although slower than recent years. According to the independent analyst firm, Ovum, it will reach 3 billion subscribers by the end of 2010.

Copyright 2005 by United Press International

Citation: Global mobile-phone subscribers hit 2B (2005, September 20) retrieved 23 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2005-09-global-mobile-phone-subscribers-2b.html
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