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Connecting Rural Nepal to the Global Village Some Examples and Some Efforts Mahabir Pun Team Leader, Nepal Wireless Networking Project Chairman, E-Networking Research and Development Vice Chairman, Nepal Research and Education Network Director of Public Relation, Open Learning Exchange Nepal Program Director, Himanchal Education Foundation Background of the Area Villages of Nepal • Nangi Village – Altitude - 2,360m – Population 780 Within project areas, Nangi is the hub of wireless network and other community development activities. PAGE 2 Villages of Nepal • Tikot Village – Altitude - 2,250m – Population - 845 PAGE 3 Villages of Nepal • Paudwar Village – Altitude - 2,180m – Population – 2,250 PAGE 4 Villages of Nepal • Shikha Village – Altitude - 2,145m – Population – 1,200 PAGE 5 Villages of Nepal • Gharamdi Village – Altitude – 2,100m – Population – 700 PAGE 6 Implementation Phases • Current State • 25 villages connected in Myagdi, Kaski and Parbat Districts PAGE 7 Beginning of Nepal Wireless Networking Project Started in 2001 with • Two Aeronet PCI Wireless Card Four D-Link DWL– 900AP 60 mw Indoor radios and different homebuild antennas. PAGE 8 Implementation Phases • Testing Phase (Year 2002) started with the technical support of foreign volunteers. • 2 villages were connected • Project was started without money and technical knowledge • We had to work on a phased approach with the help of international volunteers. PAGE 9 Implementation Phases • Phase I (Year 2003) • 5 villages connected • Financial support by Donald Strauss Foundation that came through Mark Michalaski, the undergraduate student of the Univeristy of California at Los Angeles • Technical support of international volunteers PAGE 10 Implementation Phases • Phase II (Year 2005) • 7 villages connected • Financial support by the Poverty Alleviation Fund - Nepal (funded by World Bank) • Project was implemented at the peak of the political conflict in Nepal PAGE 11 Technology Setup • Canopy Backhaul at Relay Station PAGE 12 Technology Setup • Using large trees as relay towers has worked well PAGE 13 Technology Setup • Using large trees as relay towers has worked well PAGE 14 Technology Setup • Putting a grid antenna PAGE 15 Electrical Power Management Power Sources: • Power from Main grid line in some villages and some villages have power from micro hydro generators • Solar power at the relay stations and five villages • Wind and bicycle generator at relay stations for back up in monsoon season • Deep Cycle Batteries for storage PAGE 16 Electrical Power Management • Relay Station 1 and 2 at an elevation of 10,500 ft and 11,800 ft • Operated by solar power PAGE 17 Electrical Power Management • Bicycle and Wind Generator at the Relay Station • Used as a back-up power in monsoon PAGE 18 Access Technology Used • Used PC and laptops collected from different sources • VoIP equipment such as Sipura SPA –3000, GrandStream IP phones and Cisco ATA adaptors • Network camera such as Axis 214 PTZ camera for teleteaching. Linksys, Panasonic, Polycom network and video conferencing cameras for telemedicine program • VLC, Open source software for video conferencing PAGE 19 Transport Technology Used • 2.4 GHz Wi-fi radios (802.11b/g) produced by different manufacturers • 5.8 GHz Motorola Canopies for backhaul • MikroTik Routerboards • 19 dBi homemade grid antennas • 24 dBi grid antennas • Linksys and Soekris Routers • Switches of different brands PAGE 20 Network Server Runs a Fedora Core Linux distribution with additional third party software. Currently, the server runs the following software packages. • Asterisk PBX for to VoIP calls • phpBB , for sharing messages, local news • Apache and the Intranet Server • Samba - The Windows File Server and Master Browser • MySQL • WebMin • SSH PAGE 21 Wireless Network Server • Linux Server in Pokhara with Phillip Mucci, the volunteer PAGE 22 Wireless Network Usage • Healthcare: Tele-Medicine • Lila Pun, a village worker in Nangi talking to doctor in city hospital PAGE 23 Wireless Network Usage • Communications: Communication Center Villagers of Khibang reading online newspaper PAGE 24 Website • Visit local homepage to see some examples of how the villagers are using the network. Link to the Local Homepage is as follows. • http://www.nepalwireless.com.np Bulletin Board is not accessible from outside for everybody. It is password protected to save it from the spammers. PAGE 25 Wireless Network Usage • News and Bulletin: Nepal Wireless Local Homepage PAGE 26 Goals and Objectives of the Wireless Project • Education – Increase opportunities in community schools by » creating a live tele-teaching program » providing contents in local languages to the students and villagers • Healthcare – establish a tele-hospital in urban area and link it to the district level hospitals and rural health centers – provide medical assistances to the villagers through telemedicine program • Communication – increase communication facilities in the isolated rural areas by providing » VoIP phone » video conferencing facilities » bulletin board » internet services PAGE 27 Goals and Objectives of the Wireless Network Project • Local e-Commerce – help villagers sell and buy their products in the local market through local intranet and internet • Jobs and Business Opportunities – generate jobs for younger generation locally through » remittance services » VoIP phone services for International calls » credit card transaction services for the tourists » secretarial services (photo copy, photo print, document print) PAGE 28 Present Management Structure • The project at present is a public enterprise run by a school • It works with the villagers to build communication centers • It does not provide services directly to the end-users. PAGE 29 Business Model • Exisiting Revenue Streams of the village centers for sustainability – Internet usage fee on hourly basis – Monthly fee to the teachers and students – Telephone call fees – Photocopying, photo printing etc. fees – Remittance service fees – Computer training fees in some villages • Revenue Streams for the project – ~10% to 15% additional charges for the tele-centers telephone bill – Monthly fee to the rural tele-centers for Internet connectivity; current charges range between $10 to $25 per month per village – Remittance and credit card transaction services fees PAGE 30 Business Model • Some of the jobs created by the project – Project has created some full-time and part-time jobs as well as some volunteer opportunities – Business opportunities for wireless equipment, computer and accessories PAGE 31 Assistances Provided for Other Wireless Projects • Project helped other wireless projects in different parts of Nepal – Makawanpur Network financially supported by the District Government and the Member of Parliament. – Dolakha Wireless Network supported by Katmandu Model Hospital – Palpa Wireless Network financially supported by Winrock Internationals – Bajhang Network Supported by Poverty Alleviation Fund – Nepal – Imja Wireless Network supported by Keio University – Japan for monitoring Imja Galcial lake with the technical support of Nepal Research and Education Network (NREN). PAGE 32 Assistance for Other Wireless Projects • Makawanpur – Kathmandu – Dolakha Network PAGE 33 Assistance for Other Wireless Projects • Palpa Network from Tansen for Winrock Internatioal PAGE 34 Project with Nepal Research and Education Network Imja Galcial Lake Monitoring Network from the lake to Namche Bazaar for Keio University Japan and NREN PAGE 35 Project with Nepal Research and Education Network • Imja Galcial Retreat and growing Lake from 1962 to 2005 Source: ICIMOD •CORONA •SPACE SHUTTLE 15 DEC 1962 DEC 1983 •ENVISAT, ASAR, 18 October 2007 •LANDSAT TM 1992 Quickbird Jan. 2006 •IRS ID PAN 19 MAR 2001 •IRS LISS3 2005 PAGE 36 Project with Nepal Research and Education Network • Chhukung Relay at 5,100m near Imja Lake PAGE 37 Project with Nepal Research and Education Network Link to the Field Servers in Imja Region and Namche Bazar region to see near real time photos of the lake and Namche Bazar. You can also visit the following site and see the data of the climate collected by the field servers. http://fsds.dc.affrc.go.jp/data4/Himalayan/ PAGE 38 Major Partners • Nepal Research and Education Network (http://nren.net.np) – For research, R&D, and telemedicine, climate monitoring, and system administration • Open Learning Exchange Nepal (http://olenepal.org) - For developing educational contents in local language • E-Networking Research and Development (http://enrd.org) – For building wireless network and maintenance • Thamel.com – For introducing remittance service and credit card transaction service in rural areas • Universities – National & International for volunteers • Hospitals – Kathmandu Model Hospital, Hetaunda Hospital, Dolakha Hospital, Om Hospital for telemedicine PAGE 39 Current Projects Current Project Current Project is being Supported by APT Pokhara Mustang Broadband Information Highway ~90 km PAGE 41 APT Project Site: Mustang District PAGE 42 APT Project Site: Mustang District PAGE 43 APT Project Site: Mustang District PAGE 44 Proposed Programs in Mustang • Developing a business partnership with District Government, and Local Business people to start a local Internet Service Provider business. • Working with Open Learning Exchange – Nepal and Department of Education to introduce “One Laptop Per Child Project”. Seven schools has been selected. • Setting up telemedicine centers in two villages. • Providing Internet connectivity and Internet related services to the people such as VoIP, credit card transaction, remittance, etc. • Working on setting up field servers in three sites to collect data related to climate change in the Himalayas and provide those data to the researchers. PAGE 45 One Laptop Per Child Project with OLE - Nepal • OLPC Laptops in Classrooms Distributed by Open Learning Exchange - Nepal in Schools PAGE 46 Advocating with the government of Nepal for Fiber line sharing Asking Government to share fiber cable line with private operators PAGE 47 DONATE ONE DOLLAR A MONTH A Campaign TO BUILD WIRELESS BROADBAND INFORMATION HIGHWAY ACROSS NEPAL Wireless Technology for : Education Health care (telemedicine) Communication (telephone/ email) Local business Access to news and information Contact: Mahabir Pun [email protected] Visit and Donate: http://www.himanchal.org http://www.nepalwireless.net http://www.nepalwireless.thamel.com Long Term Business and Sustainability Plan • For long term sustainability – Setup a business enterprise that includes public and private stakeholders • Potential Public Partners – Local Governments – Community Schools – Local Clubs – Rural Clinics – Ministry of Education – Ministry of Health – Ministry of Local Development • Private Partners – Local Business Persons – Local Entrepreneurs – Other Investors PAGE 49 Outcome of the Project • 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz bands have been delicensed in Nepal • License fee to use VSAT and to become rural Internet Service Provider has been reduced to less than $3 from more than US$5,000. • VoIP (IP to IP) phone services has been made legal. PAGE 50 Lessons Learned Technical Lessons • The capability of 802.11b/g devices exceed more than manufacturer specification • Wi-fi device is useful for delivering services such as video conferencing, tele-teaching, tele-training etc, other than just connecting computers to the Internet • Long-range network must have to have strong backbone • Management and technical training should be provided to local people, which is critical to the technical sustainability PAGE 51 Lessons Learned Practical Lessons • As many services as possible should be provided to the users to make it sustained and to increase the number of users such as educational, health, communication, remittance, e-commerce etc. • Networking projects create job opportunities. • Communities must be given responsibilities for managing and maintaining a network. • Wireless network can be useful for monitoring the climate change and for preventing disasters PAGE 52 Replication It is being replicated in other parts of Nepal. Is it replicable in other parts of the world? Answer – Technically, yes it is. PAGE 53 What next? • There are over 8,000 villages in Nepal with more than 15 million people living in rural areas of Nepal. • So far we have connected: – 45 villages in 7 Districts – Approximate population of 60,000 – 20 High Schools with about 4,500 Students There is a long way to go… WE ARE WORKING TO CONNECT ALL THE VILLAGES IN NEPAL. PAGE 54 Contact • For More Information – Please Visit: » http://www.himanchal.org » http://nren.net.np » http://www.olenepal.org » http://www.enrd.org » http://www.nepalwireless.net – Contact: » [email protected] » Phone: 977 9841592361 (mobile in Nepal) PAGE 55