The Future of GSM-R
The Future of GSM-R
The Future of GSM-R
18 Apr 2013 by Clive Kessell in Featured rail engineer Rail News, Rail News, S & T 0 Comments GSM-R (Global System for Mobile Railways) is now well established as the radio system of choice for track- to-train voice communication in Europe and many countries beyond. A comprehensive description of the system was given in issue 48 of The Rail Engineer (October 2008). It is also a constituent part of ERTMS (European Rail Traffic Management System), being the transmission link between the control centre and the ETCS (European Train Control System) equipment on the train. Its use in that role is much less understood, mainly because ERTMS deployment is still somewhat limited. GSM-R is, however, an old technology by current standards and, unlike its public network equivalent (GSM-P or 2G), the railway radio system has not been developed into 3G or 4G offerings. So how long can GSM-R exist and what are the implications for the longer term? This subject was extensively discussed at the recent RailTel conference in Vienna with some illuminating facts emerging.
GSM as a standard
Whilst newer technologies have emerged, GSM-P or 2G systems continue to be used by a significant proportion of the population worldwide. There can be no escape from this and the European Radio Licensing authorities, under instruction from the EU, have to keep the technology supported until 2025. The mobile radio supply industry must equally continue to supply products for this period, meaning that these radio sets will continue to be made and sold. The same situation should exist for GSM-R where there remain two suppliers of infrastructure (Siemens and Kapsch, the latter acquiring the erstwhile Nortel business) plus sufficient makers of train radio equipment. The UK GSM-R network is now fully operational in the south of the country and has replaced the National Radio Network (NRN) between the Wash and the
Severn. It will be extended to the whole country shortly and, whilst the Cab Secure Radio systems operating in the South East will remain for the time being, eventually these too will transfer to GSM-R. Other countries are also moving to nationwide networks so a lot of capital has been invested. Railway management would not be impressed if it were to be announced that GSM had to be switched off within, say, five years!
trials before a final commitment to rolling out the technology on the Great Western main line. Tests will also be done on a TGV Unit in France to prove the high speed element. In parallel, the ETCS specifications are being modified in anticipation of GPRS operation which will impact on the delay performance for timely packet delivery, modifications to the coding criteria and a network assisted cell change. Every indication is that GPRS will be successful. No evidence of packet loss has so far occurred. The final outcome is crucial as, without GPRS, the whole ERTMS program is at risk since circuit switching will not enable any national roll out right to the buffer stops and a mixture of signalling technology will continue to be necessary. The data demands of ETCS are not great but they need to be continually available otherwise movement authority data will be lost. Calculations indicate that a GPRS based service will be adequate for the task within the present dedicated frequency allocation of 4MHz uplink and downlink of the GSM-R band. Another twist in the situation is whether GSM-R networks should be migrated to IP (Internet Protocol). Existing GSM-R networks rely on TDM (TimeDivision Multiplexing) infrastructure that is not IP compatible. Jochen Nowotny from Kapsch suggested that preparation for a transition to IP needs to happen since the telecom industry will progressively standardise around secured mobile IP access, a process that was conceived more than ten years ago. Above all, safety of connection must be maintained since both voice calls and the ETCS bearer have safety implications. IP interfaces should follow the adoption of GPRS. A sensible plan will be to prepare the infrastructure first, leaving the mobile radios as the last mile of the transition. If achieved, this will converge with the evolution of other standards used for secure communication that potentially could make GSM-R a workable system for long after the 2025 date proposed.
Beyond GSM-R
There has been considerable speculation as to what will eventually replace GSM-R with much talk, principally by some radio equipment suppliers, that LTE (Long Term Evolution) within a 4G service is the answer. Detecon, a specialist
consultative firm based in Germany which has studied and advised on railway radio technology for many years, has investigated the possibilities. Certainly, LTE has a much higher data handling capability than GSM. A high peak data rate, greater than 100Mbit/sec with 150Mbit/sec maximum, will be possible. Using an IP based flat architecture, flexible bandwidth allocations of 1.25MHz, 2.5MHz and up to 20MHz will be available. High spectrum efficiency for both uplink and downlink round trip times will be much better than GSM typically 10msec as against 150msec. The word evolution is important as LTE is a mixture of well proven techniques combined with other standards and technology. Duplex operation can be either in separate frequency bands or a single time-shared band. LTE spectrum in Europe will initially be in the 0.8GHz, 1.8GHz and 2.6 GHz bands. As other mobile services are closed, additional spectrum in the 0.85GHz, 0.9GHz and 1.9GHz bands is likely. Applications such as on-board CCTV surveillance, passenger entertainment and information, and maintenance diagnostics will all be possible. Products are not yet readily available but, as the service takes off, so the price will fall. Backward compatibility with existing networks and enhanced interoperability will be a requirement. There is a downside: LTE has been conceived as a data highway and voice services may be difficult. Although voice over IP (VoIP) is reasonably well established, it is not readily useable on LTE at the present level of maturity. Voice calls remain currently on the 2G and 3G networks. Since GSM-R was conceived for track to train speech, this situation is a show stopper in the short term. Group call and call priority requirements, also back to back radio operation and local call routing, are all under consideration but it will be some time before they become available. The specifications for voice services in LTE, even in the public sector, are not due to be finalised until mid-2014 with roll out unlikely before 2016. So, whilst LTE will offer many advantages over GSM-R, migration is probably not going to be a practical proposition until 2022. This will give some comfort to railway management in terms of getting a payback on the considerable investment already spent.
need to continue collaboration at a European (actually worldwide) level to keep abreast of what is happening and actively plan for the future.