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In order to enable the use of wireless communication devices like telephones and radios in the surrounding region, electric communications equipment and antennae are put atop mobile communication towers, sometimes referred to as mobile sites.
When a wireless carrier or tower firm expands the capacity or network coverage in a region, they frequently build mobile communication towers to improve the signal reception.
A mobile site or mobile tower is a location for cellular-enabled mobile devices where antennas and electronic communications gear are set up to form a mobile or adjacent mobile in a cellular network.
These antennas and equipment are typically mounted on radio masts, towers, or other raised structures.
The area that mobile devices may consistently connect to a mobile communication tower is known as the operating range of the tower. This range, though, is not a set amount.
The Global Mobile Communication Towers Market accounted for $XX Billion in 2021 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2022 to 2030.
The Indian government intends to significantly boost telecom infrastructure across the nation in advance of the deployment of the high-speed 5G network.
Plans call for the addition of up to eight lakh new mobile towers over the next two years, more than doubling the current strength, in addition to making sure that nearly three out of every four are connected via optical fibre to increase their data-carrying capacity.
The energy needs of individual cell towers are minuscule in comparison to data centres. The 20–50kW rack densities we are presently witnessing dwarf a conventional 4kW cell site.
However, data centres are outnumbered by cell tower sites, which reach over four lakh, and their electricity footprint is a respectable twenty one million megawatt hours (MWh) per year.