Regina Leader-Post

Huawei eschewed in West, but Chinese tech giant might not need to be there

Canada is the exception, Tim Culpan says, but developing nations are the real target.

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At the heart of concerns about Huawei Technologi­es’ expansion is the Chinese giant’s role in global telecom infrastruc­ture.

Skeptics charge that the company’s relationsh­ip with Beijing makes it a tool for Chinese espionage. That’s a valid concern.

In its 2015 annual report, rotating CEO Guo Ping made a bold assertion about Huawei’s global reach:

“Our 4G equipment was widely deployed around the world and is now being used in the capital cities of over 140 countries.”

At the time, Huawei had just reported revenue growth of 23 per cent in its carrier business, which supplies networking equipment. That was the strongest pace in at least five years, driven by demand for 4G networks that offer faster downloads.

Yet Huawei’s networking business has been a perpetual laggard, and its growth outside China has been lacklustre. Data from the past seven annual reports show that the company is struggling to globalize its equipment business, or even eke out growth from that division. Strong numbers in 2015 and 2016 belie an otherwise weak growth rate.

The major exception in the West, of course, is Canada, where the company is deeply entrenched after a decade of doing business in the country. Huawei’s radio equipment is used by Canada’s three largest telecom companies, it spends millions to conduct research in partnershi­p with 10 universiti­es, and it employs more than 700 people at Huawei Canada, more than half of whom work in research and developmen­t. It has even partnered with BCE Inc. and Telus Corp. to test 5G technologi­es for the next-generation networks needed for real-time applicatio­ns such as self-driving cars.

But for the six years through 2017, revenue at the carrier unit climbed an average 12 per cent, which isn’t exciting given that the period saw the introducti­on and rollout of 4G networks as well as upgrades to older 3G networks. Its consumer business, which sells smartphone­s, grew at almost three times that pace over the same period.

Last year, the carrier division accounted for less than half of sales, from 74 per cent in 2011, while more than 50 per cent of Huawei’s revenue came from its home country, compared with 32 per cent six years prior. The Americas accounted for just 6.5 per cent of sales in 2017.

This tells us that moves to block Huawei equipment in developed countries including Australia, New Zealand, Japan, the U.S. and the U.K. — Canada is not part of that group — are unlikely to bring the company to its knees. Put simply, they were never target markets anyway.

Instead, developing markets in Asia, the Middle East and Africa are ripe for the taking. It’s no coincidenc­e that some government­s in these nations are less sensitive to privacy concerns. They’re also regions where Beijing seeks to project its position as an emerging global power.

Many such markets also have large population­s. The cost of equipment to connect 200-million consumers to mobile data in a rich and a poor nation doesn’t vary in proportion to their

GDP per capita, making such emerging markets as potentiall­y lucrative as a developed market. Losing Japan or Britain due to espionage concerns is a blow, but by no means fatal.

The advent of 5G, which focuses on data and connecting machines to the internet, potentiall­y afforded Huawei a fresh opportunit­y to make it in the West. But that door was merely ajar, not open.

Other nations are on the fence. India’s Reliance Jio Infocomm went all in with equipment newcomer Samsung Electronic­s for its 4G networks, and it is likely to tap the South Korean giant for 5G. That opened the prospect that Huawei was no longer needed as a cheaper alternativ­e to European players Ericsson and Nokia, meaning the government might block the Chinese company outright.

Last month, though, India’s Department of Telecommun­ications appeared to reverse an earlier ban and invited Huawei to join 5G trials. Other emerging markets will probably follow suit, given Huawei’s financial resources and Beijing ’s clout.

That leaves developed countries trying to convince allies to stay away from Huawei, as the U.S. has already done, according to The Wall Street Journal.

That’s likely to leave the company’s world divided into three parts: out of bounds, open for business and contested. It also means that the battle against Huawei won’t be fought on Western shores.

 ?? GREG BAKER/GETTY IMAGES ?? Chinese telecom giant Huawei has been a target of U.S. policy-makers who see it as a potential vehicle of espionage. But with growing interest from lucrative markets in Africa and Asia, the company need not fear the West’s cold shoulder.
GREG BAKER/GETTY IMAGES Chinese telecom giant Huawei has been a target of U.S. policy-makers who see it as a potential vehicle of espionage. But with growing interest from lucrative markets in Africa and Asia, the company need not fear the West’s cold shoulder.
 ??  ?? Guo Ping
Guo Ping

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