It is a worldwide goal to reduce energy consumption and CO2
emissions. The EU has targeted a reduction of 20% for year 2020 and just the
other week we saw an MoU between Safaricom and UN signed championing for SDGs
set.. A part of this energy reduction scheme concerns the telecommunication industry and ICT that
participates in a direct, indirect and systematic way. Characteristic examples which are yet to be in full use or
are at nascent stages in our country
are green networks, smart
buildings, smart grids,
Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS), energy efficient electronics
(OLEDS, photonics, nanotechnology) and the application of embedded
systems towards low
carbon and energy efficient technologies .
Telecommunication networks constitute a major sector of ICT
and they undergo a tremendous growth. Capacity issues and delivery of complex
real time services are some of the main concerns that yield high power
consumption patterns. In our increasingly competitive mobile telecommunication
sector, operators are turning to emerging markets for their next step growth
situation that increases the number of subscribers and required base station
equipment-case examples include safaricom now on 4G+ while Telkom is rolling
our 4G across its country’s network footprint. This creates the need for
equipment installation to areas where off grid renewable energy solutions are
required and energy efficient networks are important e.g. Northern parts of
Kenya. In addition, the increase of fuel and electricity costs bounds the OPEX
of the system.
Telecommunication networks and broadband access are proved to
consume a huge amount of energy for data delivery. In general, the telecommunication sector accounts for approximately 4% of the
global electricity consumption (I researched widely from ITU web links). I personally believe that reduction
of CO2 emissions
can be accomplished by
focusing on innovative telecommunication services like
online taxation, video conference,
online billing that
can enable a
green economy. The goal is to deploy telecommunication networks enabling
power efficiency, yielding a small ratio of required Watts per Gbps and Watts
per user. Green initiatives have already been commenced by different operators around
developed countries.
This summarized word
press discusses and proposes various energy efficient techniques for the green
operation of telecommunication networks. Cellular networks that suffer most of
the power waste nowadays are what I will highlight briefly. It is observed that
almost 50% (including the operation of servers) is due to the operation of
telecommunication networks. These can be mobile networks, WLANs, LANs and fixed
line networks. As far as
the overall network performance
is concerned the
energy consumption is higher at the access part of the network and the
operation of data centers that provides computations, storage, applications and
data transfer in a network. On the other hand, backbone and aggregation
networks present lower energy demands. This makes clear that an energy
efficient architecture should focus on intelligent and efficient access
techniques and efficient operation and data manipulation by data centers. The
main functionalities of a network can be summarized as the process of regeneration,
transportation, storage, routing, switching and processing of data. The power
consumption patterns of these processes can be observed that the largest part
of energy is consumed for routing/switching, regeneration and processing of
data. Both communication protocols and electronic devices are responsible for
this consumption and this imposes challenges for more sophisticated transport
techniques, thermal removal from switches or the servers and less redundant
data transfers.
For mobile networks, a
crucial factor affecting network power consumption is the site operation that
incorporates base station equipments. . It is obvious that the greatest portion
of energy is consumed for cooling of equipments and base station operation.
Monitor operation and lighting requires the minimum of energy whereas for the
backhaul energy consumption the picture is not clear and depends on the type of
connections of the backhaul network (fiber or cable). Within the base stations, high power demands
are due to feeders (transmission of radio waves), the RF conversion units and
power amplifiers, signal processing units and various electronic equipments
such as air
conditioners and auxiliary
equipments.
The power consumption
within a base station exhibits important similarities with data centers. The
available power from the electricity grid, the battery backup unit or the
renewable energy (RES) enters the base station and is divided into an in-series
path and an in-parallel path. Non- critical equipments support the operation of
the IT equipments that are divided into radio units and baseband units. The
most energy consuming devices of base stations are the cooling infrastructure,
power amplifiers, RF feeders and the AC/DC and DC/DC conversion units.
Depending on the number of sectors, nSC, and the antenna number, nTX, of the
base station, the total power consumption is computed as follows;
In the above formula an additional factor models the power
consumption due to RF links of the base station. For macrocell and microcell
base stations, empirical formulae can describe the relationship between the
power delivered to the antenna relative to the consumed power of the base
station [13]. For macrocell stations the power consumption is almost
independent of the input load (traffic) whereas for microcells, power
consumption is highly dependent on the input load.
Making a network to operate in a green manner is a complex
task. Sometimes, optimizing energy consumption in one part of the network can
increase power consumption and degrade the performance of another part of the
network. In general, total network optimization is better than the sum of
optimizations of individual parts. A network to work in an energy efficient way
is not only a matter of environmental protection through signing of memorandums
but also a crucial factor for the deployment of future networks to off grid
areas that rely on Renewable Energy Sources (RES) or personal and sensor
networks that rely on battery power supply. Minimizing power consumption has
also a great effect on the cost of operation of a network and this makes it
more affordable to the user. Network energy efficiency can be considered as a
very complex task since there is no clear solution to the problem. The sectors
of the network that require the greatest attention are the electronic
equipments of both end user and the access network, thermal removal processes,
efficient network planning and base station design.