Gulf News

UAE telcos can earn Dh12.1b from digitisati­on with 5G

Manufactur­ing sector could contribute 18% of potential revenues by 2026

- BY NAUSHAD K. CHERRAYIL Staff Reporter

Telecom operators in the UAE can capture potential revenues of $3.3 billion (Dh12.11 billion) from the digitalisa­tion of industries with 5G technology, according to a report by Ericsson.

5G mobile technology will connect more machines than people in real-time through the Internet of Things and transform the industrial space.

Previous mobile technologi­es such as 3G and 4G were built for human interactio­n, but 5G will allow industries to cut cables to their machines with the intelligen­ce of the cloud.

According to the report, the industry growth potential in the UAE is being driven by the digitalisa­tion of the manufactur­ing sector, contributi­ng to 18 per cent of the potential revenues by 2026, followed by 16 per cent in energy and utilities, and 12.5 per cent in public safety by end of the same period.

Etisalat will launch 5G for wireless and fixed lines for triple play (voice, internet and fixed-line) for consumers this year, but smartphone­s will be available only next year.

The Abu Dhabi-based operator has installed a base station (antenna) at the Expo 2020 site and will be testing and demonstrat­ing its services and technologi­es.

Rafiah Ebrahim, head of Ericsson Middle East and Africa, said that digital transforma­tion is taking place in almost every industry, disrupting and creating new business models. 5G is an enabler of this transforma­tion.

‘As big as electricit­y’

Sukhdev Singh, vice-president at market research and analysis services provider Kantar AMRB, said that 5G is as big an innovation as electricit­y was to mankind.

“It is going to change the world much more than what 3G and 4G did. 4G took us to a level well connected with various people, but what 5G is going to do is to connect people to everything,” he said.

Moreover, he said that 5G will change the way informatio­n is happening when you have connected buildings, connected roads, connected cars and smart cities and catapult Dubai into a different stage.

With AI [Artificial Intelligen­ce] also getting into the picture, he added that it is going to be a game-changer.

Turgut Erkul, head of networks evolution and transport solutions at Ericsson, said that 5G is not only about speed, but also latency, efficiency, high reliabilit­y and the number of connected devices.

Instead of having separate networks for different sectors such as the police, telcos, public safety and electricit­y, Erkul said 5G promises to serve all of these industries through one network and without interferin­g with each other.

“Critical applicatio­ns such as autonomous vehicles and remote surgery will demand prioritisa­tion. Commercial 5G networks are expected to go live next year with data-heavy applicatio­ns like augmented reality, virtual reality, 4K and 8K video streaming,” he said.

10Gbps

of data speeds possible in 5G against 1Gbps commercial speed by 4G LTE network

 ?? Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News Archives ?? A screen showing 5G’s linkages during a press conference where it was announced that Expo 2020 Dubai will be the first commercial customer to access 5G services in the Middle East, Africa and south Asia, courtesy of etisalat.
Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News Archives A screen showing 5G’s linkages during a press conference where it was announced that Expo 2020 Dubai will be the first commercial customer to access 5G services in the Middle East, Africa and south Asia, courtesy of etisalat.

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