Business Standard

Making in India already, say telecom gearmakers

Ericsson, Nokia supplying all radio equipment from local factories

- KIRAN RATHEE

As the government aims to promote domestic manufactur­ing of telecom equipment, three leading players in the sector — Nokia, Ericsson and Huawei — have said they are already making in India. Nokia, which has its manufactur­ing unit in Chennai, said all the radio equipment for local customer requiremen­ts was manufactur­ed in India. The Finnish telecom gearmaker said, in fact, close to 50 per cent of finished radio base station products were also being exported. Similarly, Swedish telecom giant Ericsson said it was the first to start manufactur­ing telecom equipment in India in 1994.

As the Indian government aims to promote domestic manufactur­ing of telecom equipment, three leading players in the sector — Nokia, Ericsson and Huawei — have said they are already making in India.

Nokia, which has its manufactur­ing unit in Chennai, said all the radio equipment for local customer requiremen­ts was manufactur­ed in India. The Finnish telecom gear maker said, in fact, close to 50 per cent of finished radio base station products were also being exported.

Similarly, Swedish telecom giant Ericsson said it was the first to start manufactur­ing telecom equipment in India in 1994. “Through our new factory in Pune we are providing equipment to Indian telecom operators, including radio access and microwaves. When it comes to exporting from that facility, we met the minister and have already started seeking approvals to start exporting,” Nitin Bansal, country manager, India, Ericsson, told Business Standard.

Asked how soon the company planned to start exporting, Bansal said it did not have a timeline but the company proposed to start exporting to Southeast Asia soon.

Both Ericsson and Nokia are meeting the domestic demand of radio equipment from their factories in India.

“All radio and microwave components are being manufactur­ed and supplied from the factory in Pune. That doesn’t mean everything else is being imported. There are a lot of other things that we produce in Pune,” Bansal said.

Huawei also said it had been manufactur­ing telecom equipment in India for quite some time, but the company did not share details about what products were manufactur­ed locally.

“We have manufactur­ing facilities in Chennai for telecom network equipment. Additional­ly, we also cooperate and outsource through our global EMS partner, whose world-class facility is also located in Chennai. Through these facilities, we have been delivering latest cutting-edge telecom equipment to the Indian market,” Huawei said in reply to a Business Standard query.

Nokia said it was manufactur­ing at its Chennai facility the complete gamut of telecom products — 2G, 3G, LTE and core networks — for the domestic and global markets.

On 5G manufactur­ing plans, Sanjay Malik, head of India, Nokia, said, “Nokia is already manufactur­ing 4G equipment in India and will be 5G-ready as and when the Indian market is ready for large-scale commercial deployment.”

Similarly, Ericsson’s Bansal said, “When it comes to 5G, the radios and the other equipment that we supply are ready for 5G. This is something we have said, that the Massive MIMO product that we supply is ready to deliver, the baseband and everything else is also 5G-ready.”

Promoting domestic manufactur­ing of telecom equipment is one of the priority areas for the Department of Telecommun­ications (DoT). Telecom Secretary Aruna Sundararaj­an has said the country still imports about 8085 per cent of all telecom equipment and the government will be moving to ensure it is able to have telecom manufactur­ing done in India. There would be a big policy thrust in the New Telecom Policy, she added.

The government wants manufactur­ing from the point of view of its “Make in India” project as well as due to security concerns.

In telecom, the DoT already has a provision which says that every single component used in Indian networks must be in security conformity to Indian standards. But the DoT is also planning to develop a set of best practices at the level of the infrastruc­ture layer.

The DoT will be working with telecom operators to make sure that the best practices are put in place by the end of this year.

Asked about the security policy, Bansal said, “We at Ericsson believe that as we are working in India, we have to strictly follow all the rules and regulation­s set by the government.”

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