Calgary Herald

Government­s, tech firms partner in 5G venture

Ontario, Quebec part of wireless test corridor

- Geordon omand The Canadian Press With files from Michael Oliveira in Toronto and The Associated Press

•The government­s of Canada, Ontario and Quebec are partnering with some of the world’s digital heavyweigh­ts to usher in the next generation of wireless technology.

A $400-million publicpriv­ate investment will create a corridor of 5G wireless test beds through Canada’s two largest provinces, aimed at giving companies a chance to experiment with new ideas and products that are only now becoming possible thanks to recent breakthrou­ghs in telecommun­ication technology.

While many estimate it will take years before 5G is widely rolled out to the Canadian mass market, it’s being billed as the wireless backbone to futuristic technologi­es including driverless cars, remotely controlled complex surgeries, and download speeds up to 100 times faster than today’s 4G networks.

“5G is the gateway to the future and we are just on the brink of this technologi­cal revolution,” Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains said Monday at a funding announceme­nt in Ottawa.

The new project is called ENCQOR — Evolution of Networked Services through a Corridor in Quebec and Ontario for Research and Innovation — and will allow an estimated 1,000 small and medium-sized businesses to plug into an early 5G platform for research and developmen­t.

Ontario, Quebec and the federal government have each pledged about $67 million, while the remaining $200 million will come from five private-sector partners. Ericsson, Ciena Canada, Thales Canada, IBM Canada and CGI will lead the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p, which is expected to “secure” more than 4,000 jobs, 1,800 of which will be specialize­d in 5G.

Karl Sasseville, a spokesman for Bains, clarified that those jobs are made up of existing positions within the five private-sector partners that will be repurposed for the project.

Borje Ekholm, CEO of Swedish telecom giant Ericsson, said Canada is “leapfroggi­ng” to the front of 5G technology with its commitment to wireless innovation.

Ekholm said he expects the test-bed technology to be deployed later this year and become operationa­l by early 2019.

The government estimates informatio­n and communicat­ions technology contribute­d $76 billion to the country’s gross domestic product in 2017.

One of the first looks at the potential of 5G technology came at the recent Pyeongchan­g Winter Games, where a test network powered self-driving vehicles, virtual reality content, and an app that allowed viewers to access multiple camera angles of events.

But these experience­s weren’t open to just anyone with a smartphone or tablet. Accessing the next generation wireless networks will require consumers to upgrade to a new device with updated hardware.

It’s expected that the rollout of 5G networks will also help bolster internet access for rural communitie­s that currently have poor broadband connection­s.

Last month, Bell and Huawei announced a trial launch of so-called wireless-to-the-home technology that’s being seen as a precursor to how 5G would extend the availabili­ty of high-speed internet access. Rather than having sparsely populated rural areas wired for internet access, a wireless transmitte­r can establish a connection with nearby homes that are outfitted with the right modem.

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