Title :
Electricity use of wired and wireless telecommunications networks in the United States
Author :
Matthews, H. Scott ; Loh, Woon Sien ; Chong, Hui Min
Author_Institution :
Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Abstract :
This paper investigates the electricity consumption of the telecommunications network in the United States. The scope of the study covers the ´voice´ network, including equipment used by both the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)-used by traditional ´wired´ phone companies-and the cellular network-used by wireless companies. Building on results from a previous study, the estimated total electricity consumption of the telecommunications network in the US was found to be 29-34 TWh/year, or about 0.8% to 0.9% of the US total electricity consumption. This paper analyzes the breakdown of the electricity consumption between the PSTN and the cellular network, and found the cellular network to be about 2 times more energy efficient in terms of energy used per subscriber connection; while the PSTN network is more energy efficient in terms of electricity consumed per call-minute. With the increasing trend of wireless subscriberships while the number of wired customers remains about constant, the energy efficiency of the cellular network is expected to grow, since the equipment requirements of the cellular network do not scale up proportionately with the number of cellular users.
Keywords :
cellular radio; energy conservation; power consumption; telecommunication power supplies; telephone networks; Public Switched Telephone Network; US; United States; cellular network; energy efficiency; equipment requirements; subscriber connection; telecommunications network; total electricity consumption; voice network; wired telecommunications networks; wireless telecommunications networks; Cellular networks; Cellular phones; Electric breakdown; Energy consumption; IP networks; Intelligent networks; Land mobile radio cellular systems; Telecommunication switching; Telephony; Web and internet services;
Conference_Titel :
Electronics and the Environment, 2003. IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7743-5
DOI :
10.1109/ISEE.2003.1208061