After two weeks it appears the situation is stabilizing (not getting
worse) on Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands. But recovery and logistics
still seems very slow in both territories. A reminder, I am focusing on
U.S. Territories, but other Caribbean islands are still recovering from
Hurricane Irma and Maria.
Fatalities
Puerto Rico: 16 storm related (last report Sept. 27)
Media estimate at least 60 storm related deaths
CDC mortatility rate for PR: average 80 deaths per day all
causes
U.S. Virgin Islands: 5 storm related (last report Oct. 3)
30 deaths from all causes (natural causes, accidents,
homicides)
Telecommunications
Satellite phones
Iridium reports over 2,000 non-military satellite phones active,
normally less than 10 non-military satellite phones active in
Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands area. Iridium does not
release military usage.
Landline phones
813,546 landlines (CIA World Factbook)
ILEC (Claro) reports all Central Offices have voice, data and long
distance working. Estimate 40% of landline subscriber local loops are in
service, mostly in metro areas.
CLECs - no reports
Cable - all cable subscribers currently out of service
Wireless mobile phones
3,227,281 (CIA World Factbook)
AT&T, Claro and T-Mobile announced extension of "open roaming"
agreement between networks. I expect Sprint and Open Mobile will also
extend their participation. Because open roaming makes accurate billing
impossible, all carriers also announced they are waiving charges in Puerto
Rico.
Puerto Rico Telecommunications Regulatory Board announced carriers
have continued their joint restoration agreement. PRTRB expects 60%
restoration of service by end of October, and 100% restoration of
service before Christmas. I can not evaluate this forecast, but it seems
aggressive; or the level of service will be the bare minimum and capacity
will be very congested.
Claro reports it has at least one cell site active in 28 of 78
municipalities, covering about 310,000 subscribers. It may not be
high-quality service, but its some service.
AT&T, Open Mobile, Sprint and T-Mobile have not disclosed how much of
their networks are operating. AT&T stated it is carrying 8 million
calls and 4 million texts per day.
FCC reports 2359 out of 2671 (88%) cell sites on Puerto Rico are out
of service.
PRTRB reports 1254 out of 1619 (77%) cell sites on Puerto Rico are out
of service.
I still do not understand the different statistics being reported by
FCC and PRTRB or how they calculate their statistics.
ROK Mobile and M2Catalyst, mobile metrics platforms, have published
estimates of cell tower damage in Puerto Rico
Claro: 14% cell sites operating
Open Mobile: 8% cell sites operating
Extended Network: 7% cell sites operating
T-Mobile: 31% cell sites operating
CLARO|TELCEL: 6% cell sites operating
AT&T: 18% cell sites operating
Percentages are affected by the denominators, i.e. share, which wasn't
released. But it does show all carriers experienced a lot of damage.
http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/presently-over-86-of-cell-sites-in-puerto-rico-are-still-not-operating-in-aftermath-of-hurricane-maria-300530074.html
American Tower, Crown Castle and SBA, which collectively own many
physical towers leased by mobile carriers on Puerto Rico, report little
material structural damage to the towers themselves. But there was
substantial damage to carrier customer equipment on the towers and lack
of electric power at almost all towers. Note: there are twitter photos of
at least two collapsed towers, but I don't know those tower owners.
U.S. Virgin Islands has almost no change (or getting slightly worse) in
number of working cell sites during the last week.
Internet Services
647 IP networks out of 1205 are routed from Puerto Rico (RIPE)
66 IP networks out of 70 are routed from U.S. Virgin Islands (RIPE)