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SERENATE S tudy into E uropean R esearch & E ducation N etworking A s T argeted by e Europe

SERENATE S tudy into E uropean R esearch & E ducation N etworking A s T argeted by e Europe. Karel Vietsch TERENA CEO Internet2 International Task Force meeting Arlington VA, 6 May 2002. Europe. > 40 independent countries European Union 15 member states Accession states Others.

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SERENATE S tudy into E uropean R esearch & E ducation N etworking A s T argeted by e Europe

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  1. SERENATEStudy into European Research & Education Networking As Targeted by eEurope Karel Vietsch TERENA CEO Internet2 International Task Force meeting Arlington VA, 6 May 2002

  2. Europe • > 40 independent countries • European Union 15 member states • Accession states • Others

  3. Status of research networking in Europe • Historically, always trying to catch up with North America • Currently, leading position in many aspects of networking • Challenge of Gigabit networking taken up: GÉANT and number of national networks core of 10 Gbps and wide coverage of 2.5 Gbps • Moving to truly optical networks and >100 Gbps in foreseeable future

  4. SERENATE – why? • The European Commission needs inputs for preparing “costed initiatives” to the Council of Ministers for setting up a trans-European research network at 100 Gb/s • But also for the research networks, governments and funding bodies and industry it is a good moment for some strategic thinking about research networking from now till 2010: • bandwidth has become really cheap • but equipment becomes the bottleneck • with GÉANT, for the first time we have a European interconnect with capacities as large as the most advanced national research network • we may be moving to truly optical networks • there may be opportunities for new models of acquisition, new business models • Grids may bring new demands from users • ………

  5. SERENATE – what is it? • Series of studies to investigate the strategic aspects of the development of “superfast” research networks, looking into the technical, organisational and financial aspects, the market conditions and regulatory environment • Funded by the European Commission with 960 kEUR • 1 May 2002 – 30 September 2003 • Partners: TERENA, the Academia Europaea, Center for Tele-Information (CTI), DANTE, the European Science Foundation (ESF) • but very active participation needed from research networking organisations, telecom operators, equipment manufacturers, governments and funding bodies, and users!

  6. SERENATE – how is it organised? • Steering Committee consisting of: • Marko Bonac (ARNES) • Ian Butterworth (Academia Europaea) • Dai Davies (DANTE) • Sabine Jaume (RENATER) • Fernando Liello (GÉANT) • Tony Mayer (ESF) • Knud Erik Skouby (CTI) • Karel Vietsch (TERENA, project manager) • David Williams (TERENA, chairman of the Steering Committee) • 14 distinct work items, each led by a member of the Steering Committee

  7. General Workshops • Initial Workshop, September 2002 • Workshop for telecom operators, October 2002 • Final Workshop, June 2003

  8. Regulations, forecasts and models • Study into the development of the regulatory situation, June-November 2002 • Study into expected evolution of international connectivity in Europe and to other continents over the next five years, December 2002 – February 2003 • Case studies and workshop on “alternative models” of infrastructure ownership, August-December 2002

  9. Infrastructure and equipment availability • Review of status – current or planned for near future – of available transport infrastructure, including (development of) pricing, June-November 2002 • Study of expected availability and characteristics of necessary equipment for large-scale long-distance networks at >100 Gbps, July-December 2002

  10. User needs and priorities • Collection of user requirements – questionnaire and workshop, August 2002 – January 2003

  11. Extension and coverage • Report on a number of initiatives for extending research networks to education and other user communities, December 2002 – March 2003 • Report identifying issues related to the geographic coverage of European research and education networking, December 2002 – March 2003

  12. Consolidated views • Future scenarios for funding of research networking infrastructure, December 2002 – February 2003 • Scenarios concerning likely costs and time schedule for infrastructure evolution, March-May 2003 • Summary report on SERENATE studies, June-August 2003

  13. Final objective • “By the end of the project, the relevant policy makers, funders and managers of research networks in Europe will have at their disposal a set of recommendations and background material that will enable them to set their policies for the further development of European research and education networking.” • www.serenate.org

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