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EU SPENDS 93 MILLION EUROS ON GÉANT
A contract to upgrade Europe's world-leading GÉANT communications network for
research and education has been signed by the European Commission in Brussels.
Upgrades will include high-performance services for the most demanding network
users, giving researchers their own "wavelengths" across the continent;
end-to-end connectivity, which will give scientists direct access to the
advanced communication capabilities of GÉANT and Europe's national research
networks; and a mobility and roaming service that will enable scientists to
stay connected to GÉANT wherever they are doing their research.
GÉANT and its partners, the National Research and Education Networks (NRENs),
together provide the research communications backbone infrastructure for 34
countries in Europe. The European Commission's contribution to this project,
93 million euros, is estimated at less than 50 percent of total expenditure.
The remainder will be co-financed by the participating countries.
"Providing scientists across the EU with a state-of-the-art communications
architecture, delivering performance far superior to the services offered by
today's commercial Internet, enables the EU to increase its ability to
innovate and compete –- an ability that is in turn essential to its
productivity and growth", noted Enterprise and Information Society
Commissioner Olli Rehn. "Industry take-up of GÉANT's current architecture and
design is encouraging, and is paying dividends. From the first quarter of
2005, the upgraded GÉANT network infrastructure will further expand the supply
of advanced communication technology services, and should prompt a further
wave of information and communication technology innovation, leading to a more
efficient and cost effective provision of internet services to citizens."
Commission funding for GÉANT under this contract, which runs until September
2008, comes from the EU Research and Development Framework Programme. GÉANT
enables all researchers from Iceland to the Caucasus to pool their ideas, data
and computing power to achieve results that they could never manage alone. For
example, GÉANT supports advanced collaboration tools used by the aerospace
industry and the European Space Agency (ESA). It has played an important part
in stimulating take-up of Internet Protocol IPv6, which is bringing advanced
Internet services into homes, businesses and even vehicles, and has even
enabled astronomers to combine data from several radio telescopes, enabling
them to view the early universe in exquisite detail.
The upgraded GÉANT network, co-ordinated by DANTE, will use a "hybrid"
architecture that seamlessly combines the best technology from the worlds of
telephony (switching) and the Internet (routing).
This will provide faster, more powerful services for the most demanding users,
creating dedicated routes along predictable traffic paths. End-to-end
connectivity will enable scientists to have their "own" virtual private
networks. A new mobility and roaming service will allow scientists to stay
connected to GÉANT, wherever they are working.
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