Convergencia Research, Consultoría especializada en Latinoamérica y Caribe
Thursday, March 30, 2017

2017 FTTH Latam Conference

According to Corning, FTTH will have an annual double-digit growth in Latin America

Homero Diniz, president of Brazil's Corning subsidiary, told Convergencialatina that Latin America is behind in fiber expansion as 90% of accesses are still on copper. During the FTTH Council conference, Diniz predicted that 48% of the mobile telephone customer base will be on 5G networks and that, globally, 1 billion connected users will be added per year until 2020.

Last news and analysis

América Latina · Convergence

28/03/2024

Convergencialatina returns on Wednesday, April 3

Puerto Rico · Fixed Broadband

28/03/2024

Puerto Rico must deploy fiber optics in more than half of the island's homes

The data came from a Fiber Broadband Association webinar that revealed the island's situation in FTTH services. There is a plan for the footprint to reach one hundred percent of homes in 2027 financed by federal funds and privately executed.

Puerto Rico · Fixed Broadband

28/03/2024

Puerto Rico must deploy fiber optics in more than half of the island's homes

The data came from a Fiber Broadband Association webinar that revealed the island's situation in FTTH services. There is a plan for the footprint to reach one hundred percent of homes in 2027 financed by federal funds and privately executed.

Uruguay · Pay TV · Internet & OTT · Operators

27/03/2024

Through agreements with Claro and Movistar, cable operators expand their Internet offer

These are agreements of different types, which include leaving the last mile for the cable operator or contracts for available bandwidth. Antel could join with infrastructure leasing. Some cable operators are already building their own networks.

Paraguay · Operators

26/03/2024

Government analyzes partial privatization of Copaco

The state operator is going through a delicate moment. Its income does not cover operating expenses and it must fulfil a debt obligation of US$110 million. Furthermore, the lack of investments led to the obsolescence of its infrastructure. Oscar Stark, president of the firm, states that alternatives are being evaluated to obtain the necessary funds, including the possibility of adding private partners. And he believes that in 18 months "the situation will be resolved."

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