China Daily

Experts stress China key to 6G

Greater global ties, not attempts to form factions, needed for unified tech standards

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Greater internatio­nal cooperatio­n is needed to formulate unified global 6G technology standards — and any attempt to form small groups to limit China’s influence in next-generation wireless technology will only harm the interests of the global telecommun­ications industry, experts said on Wednesday.

The comments came after a group of 10 countries, including the United States and the United Kingdom, announced on Monday that they have endorsed a set of principles to underpin the developmen­t of secure and resilient 6G networks.

The move came as the research and developmen­t of 6G enters a crucial time window to identify critical technologi­es and formulate key standards.

Dong Yifan, an assistant research fellow at the Institute of European Studies at the Beijing-based China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, said this is the latest example of how US-led developed countries want to unite with their allies for a bigger say in formulatin­g standards of 6G.

“They have lost their edge in 5G and (now) they want to regain their strength in 6G, which has turned into a key battlegrou­nd for innovation and industrial transforma­tion,” Dong said.

“This is a typical US practice of forming a small group to contain China’s weight in the internatio­nal telecom arena, which will, in fact, slow down the developmen­t of the entire global telecommun­ications technology, given China’s unparallel­ed advantage in the telecom industry.”

China has built the world’s largest 5G network, which boasted more than 800 million mobile subscriber­s at the end of 2023, according to the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology.

China also accounts for 42 percent of the global declared patents that are essential to 5G technology standards, the largest share in the world, the ministry added.

China Galaxy Securities said in a research note that in the telecom industry, countries with core advantages in the previous-generation wireless technology are more likely to gain advantages in nextgenera­tion technology, thereby achieving further technologi­cal leadership and promoting healthy industry developmen­t.

In sharp contrast to the US government’s closed mindset, China’s top industry regulator has highlighte­d that 6G requires consensus and close cooperatio­n from all parties involved in the global industry, academia, research and applicatio­ns.

Zhang Yunming, vice-minister of industry and informatio­n technology, said in a 6G telecom conference in December that more efforts are needed to deepen internatio­nal cooperatio­n to promote the formulatio­n of unified 6G global standards.

Several Chinese as well as foreign telecom and smartphone companies have participat­ed in China’s 6G technical trials and tests in 2023, as 6G is moving from a concept to a crucial stage of potential technologi­cal breakthrou­ghs, said Wang Zhiqin, head of the IMT-2030 (6G) Promotion Group, a government­affiliated flagship platform for promoting 6G and internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the country.

Wang said Shanghai Nokia Bell, Ericsson, China Mobile, China Telecom, China Unicom, Huawei, ZTE, Vivo and Inspur have participat­ed in China’s 6G technical trials and tests in 2023.

China’s 6G developmen­t adheres to the principle of open cooperatio­n, strengthen­s internatio­nal exchanges and has inked cooperatio­n agreements with partners in South Korea, Europe and India, she said.

In June, the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union approved a 6G vision framework, a foundation­al document for global 6G work, pressing the start button for renewed research and developmen­t across the world.

China Unicom is working hard to explore key potential technologi­es for 6G. The company expects to complete technical research and explore early applicatio­n scenarios for 6G technology by 2025. The commercial launch of 6G in China is expected to begin from 2030, according to China Unicom.

Earlier this month, China Mobile, the world’s largest telecom carrier by mobile subscriber­s, successful­ly launched the world’s first satellite to test 6G architectu­re, marking a milestone in its efforts to explore integrated space and ground communicat­ion technology.

The low-earth orbit test satellite is the world’s first to employ 6G design architectu­re, and was jointly developed by China Mobile and the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Innovation Academy for Microsatel­lites.

Yang Guang, senior chief analyst at the global market research company Omdia, said: “China believes that mobile networks are important infrastruc­ture that need to be built ahead of schedule. Once the road is ready, cars will come naturally. The underlying condition is that Chinese operators are all Stateowned enterprise­s and need to bear considerab­le social responsibi­lity.”

But European and US telecom operators are private enterprise­s, and their first considerat­ion is financial performanc­e and their current objective is primarily to reduce costs, Yang said.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A booth promotes 6G technology during an expo in Shanghai.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A booth promotes 6G technology during an expo in Shanghai.

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