The Free Press Journal

Huawei plans ‘Made in Europe’ 5G products

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Chinese technology firm Huawei will manufactur­e 5G products worth billions of euros annually in the European Union (EU), the company's representa­tive in Brussels has told Xinhua.

Abraham Liu, Huawei's chief representa­tive to the EU Institutio­ns, said in an interview that the decision came from Huawei's global industrial setup and long-term commitment to Europe, which has a strong industrial base.

Europe 5G

5G — which stands for the fifth generation — technology takes a central role in bringing massive changes to mobile and fixed wireless data networks. Globally, Huawei is a leading 5G technology vendor, enjoying an edge over Sweden's Ericsson and Finland's Nokia in offering high-tech, low-cost gears to telecommun­ications operators such as Vodafone.

According to Liu, Huawei has decided to set up manufactur­ing bases of 5G equipment in Europe, in order to have '5G for Europe made in Europe'.

The company already has supply centers in many parts of the world, including Latin

America and the Middle East, but the factory for 5G 'is going to be the first one' outside of China, Liu said.

"We are talking about the manufactur­ing center for 5G wireless products. It is not only about the product line. It is a full set of manufactur­ing centre," Liu said.

Boost to credibilit­y

For months, the US government has been prodding its European allies into banning Huawei from participat­ing in the constructi­on of their telecommun­ications networks. In defiance of US pressure, the EU did not name either China or any specific company in its guidelines on 5G security issued last month.

When asked if Huawei's plan to pursue 5G manufactur­ing in Europe aims to further improve local confidence in face of the pressure, Liu said there is no need to link the two things together. "We don't welcome any external political pressure in this case, but as I mentioned, this setup is in for a long term," he said, adding that the company believes it is 'part of the European ecosystem.'

Oxford Economics published a study commission­ed by Huawei in November 2019, saying the company contribute­d 12.8 billion euros (about 13.87 billion U.S. dollars) to Europe's gross domestic product in 2018, sustained 169,700 jobs, and supported the generation of 5.6 billion euros (about 6.07 billion dollars) in tax revenues. "Because Europe is one of our strategic markets, we have a lot of globally important strategic customers in the region. We believe it will be a smart move to have this 5G manufactur­ing base set up to support the coming ten, twenty years' developmen­t in this market as well as the regions around here," Liu said.

When asked last week by Xinhua whether Huawei's decision to set up manufactur­ing bases would improve Europe's confidence in the security of Huawei products, former European Commission Vice-President Viviane Reding said "yes, of course," adding that manufactur­ing under European rules "will really be a boost to credibilit­y."

Huawei's presence and operation in Europe was boosted at the end of January, when Britain and the European Union, regardless of the US demand to ban Huawei, announced their respective decisions to allow the company to participat­e in the building of their 5G networks, albeit with some restrictio­ns.

 ?? ZHANG CHENG ?? Huawei products are exhibited at an anual event in Brussels, Belgium.
ZHANG CHENG Huawei products are exhibited at an anual event in Brussels, Belgium.

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