From The Times


October 29, 2007


Goa goes broadband in hi-tech drive for
foreign investment




Ashling
O’Connor, Goa


In Goa’s capital city of Panjim,
Deepak Surlakar has just spent a minute completing a task that used to take him
more than a week. 


Emerging from the Mahiti Ghar (citizen service centre), a bright yellow tin
shack, the 50-year-old property developer is clutching a digitally produced
copy of a land ownership record. He paid 15 rupees a sheet and did not have to
bribe anyone to get it. 


He seems happy with his initial brush with the Goan government’s push to
become India’s
first fully wired state. “It was done in no time,” he said, smiling broadly.
“Before, I had to apply for the form and it took eight days.” 


Downloading public documents has been possible for five years in Goa, India’s
most progressive state, but the fibre-optic cable threaded through tree
branches overhead to the kiosk from the land registry office across the street
is evidence of an initiative to take its technological edge further. 


Goa is going broadband. And, in a project
that would be ambitious even in a developed economy, it aims to have it all
done by March. 


United Telecom Limited (UTL), the Bangalore-based company awarded the
contract nearly a year ago, has laid nearly 250km (155 miles) of cable and
says that it has completed the first phase of the project – linking the
government’s headquarters to district offices via a ten gigabits-per-second
network. 


By December, district and village administrations will have one
gigabits-per-second connectivity and within five months 320,000 households will
have access to speeds of up to ten megabits per second. Initially, the aim is
to sign up 80,000 homes to bundled access to voice, data, high-speed internet
and television services for about 500 rupees a month – a significant discount
to buying cable TV, telephone and internet separately. 


Users will be able to pause and fast-forward live television, hold
video-conferences with friends and colleagues and file tax returns straight to
the government server. 


It all seems a little fantastic in a country where nearly half the 1.1
billion population does not even have an electric light in the home. Goa,
though, is probably the only place in India where this futuristic
scenario stands a chance of becoming reality. It is the smallest state, so is
relatively easy to manage, as well as being the richest per capita – Goans earn
about three times as much as the average Indian. It is already well developed
in terms of infrastructure because of the tourism industry, which accounts for
half of the state’s GDP. The roads are good, everyone has electricity and
nearly 85 per cent of the population is literate, compared with the national
average of 35 per cent. 


JP Singh, the chief secretary, admits that Goa
is “more like a developed economy”. While India
is growing at 9 per cent a year, Goa is
enjoying a rate of more than 12 per cent. He sees the opportunity for Goa to
rival Bombay and Bangalore as a business process outsourcing
(BPO) centre. There are already 300 BPOs up and running and two IT parks on the
way. 


Goa is hoping to attract serious foreign
investment. Tourists who flock to the state for its beaches and laid-back vibe
may be tempted to stay longer. 


“With our bandwidth, someone from the US
or Asia would be able to carry on with their
business,” Rajendra Pal, the IT secretary, said. “There is already talk of Goa 
being a first-world state. An American would feel at
home here.” 


The Goan government has good reason to feel pleased with itself: it is
getting a world-class infrastructure for free. UTL is investing 4,000 million
rupees (£49.4 million) and will pay 12 per cent of net revenues to the state
after the fifth year. 


“It’s difficult to say how long it will take India to be a wired nation, but
initiatives like this will put pressure on the government to put more services
on the internet,” Anirudh Prabhakaran, chief operating officer of 3i Info-tech,
a company investing $6 million (£2.9 million) in the e-governance branch of the
Goa project, said. “It will act as a catalyst to other states.” 


Switched-on state


1961Goa liberated from the Portuguese 


1.4m population 


58,677 GDP per capita in rupees 


12.1% GDP growth 


83.5% literacy rate 


60% personal computer penetration 


1,140 engineering graduates a year 


2.4m broadband subscribers in India 


7m new mobile subscribers in India every month 


Have
your say


i am goan and what you write is quite
accurate.my main problem is the difference between theory and practice.for
example i tried to do an online transaction between two of my own but got this
miserable reply from one of indias premier banks 



Transaction Date 27-Oct-2007 Amount INR 100.00 Status Failure Reason
Restrictions made by Branch. Please contact Branch Card Details Payee Name Card
No. Nick Name Amount (INR) 100.00 Credit Account Details Account No. Branch
Amount (INR) 


simon fernandes, catford london,
uk


http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/technology/article2759447.ece


 


Sanny de Quepem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>





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