Dear colleagues,

Let me start by wishing you all a happy and healthy 2021. I would like to give 
you a quick update on the discussions that have taken place at ITU in the past 
few weeks, in particular with regards to New IP, also called FVCN.

As you may recall from my earlier posts, there were two study groups seeking to 
establish "Questions" - the ITU equivalent of a working group - to study a new 
network architecture and protocol suite, that were positioned to replace or 
significantly amend the current set of Internet protocols and standards which 
are maintained by the IETF.

Both study groups 11 and 13 held meetings in the week before Christmas. In 
those meetings, it again became clear that outside of the small group of 
initial proponents there was little support for the proposed work. And a large 
group of countries and sector members, including the European Commission, the 
27 EU member states, the UK, US, Canada, Japan, as well as the RIPE NCC, GSMA 
and ETNO, all objected to the establishment of these Questions.

The ITU-T processes require these decisions to be consensus based and the long 
and sustained opposition could only lead to the conclusion that there was no 
consensus on moving forward with these proposals. Subsequent to that conclusion 
and although the process technically allows for it, the meetings also failed to 
reach agreement to send these proposals for consultation of the member states. 

This now means that, after about a year of discussions, all options in the 
current process have been exhausted and effectively the topic has been put to 
rest. In fact, as the question was raised on whether the groups should continue 
to discuss the proposals, the meeting could not agree and again failed to reach 
consensus to do so.

Further, as we now expect the WTSA-20 conference to be rescheduled to March 
2022. A contingency plan has been put in place. As part of that, a revised set 
of Questions (excluding the ones the ones that failed to reach consensus) have 
now been forwarded to a meeting of the Telecommunications Standardisation 
Advisory Group (TSAG) for endorsement as the outcome of the discussions on 
future work.

We expect that, with the endorsement of those agreed questions, we can leave 
the discussion about the work plan behind, and focus on those work items that 
fit within the remit of the Union and on which there is consensus that 
standardisation efforts by ITU-T are required and helpful to our industry.

As a sector member of ITU-T, we will remain engaged with these and other study 
groups and update you on any relevant developments, also towards WTSA and other 
upcoming conferences such as WTDC and the next Plenipotentiary, which will take 
place in the autumn of 2022.

Best,

Marco Hogewoning
Manager Public Policy and Internet Governance
RIPE NCC









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