First Responder Terminal Market to Reach $3.5B by 2013
(Business News & Technology News, 6 Nov 2008)
The market for terminals used by emergency first responders looks set to grow significantly over the next five years from slightly more than $1billion in 2007 to more than $3.6 billion in 2013, according to market research firm ABI Research. This growth will occur as agencies standardize on digital technologies such as APCO/TIA Project 25 and ETSI TETRA. Although something of a laggard compared to markets in other regions, the North American market looks set to be the largest global opportunity in the long term, as federal funding filters down through the system.
"The public safety wireless communications market for technology and geographic location has solidified. North America is dominated by P25, while the rest of the world seems set on the European-developed TETRA standard with isolated islands of P25 in the Asia-Pacific region and legacy TETRAPOL in France," says Stuart Carlaw, Vice President.
In the United States, public safety agencies apply for funding grants to obtain the equipment and training they need. This decentralized procurement means that the funding mechanisms do not make coordination easy. In Europe, several blue light networks are funded on a nationwide basis. The European model is also largely privatized: rather than government being the provider of these services, it is private cellular operators; O2 plays this role for the UK's Airwave system.
"First responder terminal vendors see the fragmented, but huge and less mature, U.S. market as the greatest opportunity for the future, although it must be recognized that penetration into this market is difficult due to technology choice and to Motorola's preeminent market position," Carlaw adds.