Khaleej Times

Telcos connecting everything to recoup 5G costs

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barcelona — For the telecoms industry, the task of launching 5G services is a lot like going the wrong way on the moving walkways that ferry delegates around the vast Barcelona fairground that hosts the Mobile World Congress.

Operators are striding towards a future with data speeds up to 100 times faster than 4G networks and billions of connected devices to help run homes, offices, factories and cities — creating a seemingly limitless opportunit­y for an industry now hamstrung by the smartphone market’s saturation.

Moving against them is the expense of upgrading networks to run 5G: This requires denser arrays of masts and ‘smallcells’ to deliver data-intensive services, and the laying of fibre-optic cable to boost speed and achieve the low reaction times needed to delight online gamers or make self-driving cars safe.

Put it all together, and the global cost of 5G infrastruc­ture investment and enabling the so-called ‘Internet of Things’ (IoT) will run to $2.7 trillion by the end of 2020, estimates Greensill, a company that provides working capital to industry.

With early movers like the United States, China, Japan and South Korea only starting to roll out 5G networks, and other regions - especially Europe — still years away, the challenge will be to earn back that up-front investment.

“There will be some very tough discussion­s, but hopefully now what will be interestin­g to see is that there should be enough test deployment­s and real market data and we can start to see at least in the short term if it’s viable,” said Sam Evans, a partner at global consultanc­y Delta Partners.

Industry associatio­n GSMA, which hosts the Mobile World Congress, sees a vast opportunit­y. It estimates the number of devices connected to the IoT will triple to 25 billion by 2025, generating a fourfold rise in revenues to $1.1 trillion.

“Is one use case going to finance 5G? The answer is: not really. It’s going to be a multitude of use cases that benefit from the features of 5G,” said Borje Ekholm, CEO of network vendor Ericsson. Ekholm’s 5G favourite is remote surgery: “We laugh a bit about that, right? But the reality is already today when you operate prostate it’s done with a robot,” said Ekholm, in a dig at the industry’s male-dominated demographi­cs.

The first deployment­s of 5G, for example by Verizon in four U.S. cities, are of fixed-wireless broadband in which high-speed internet is delivered by radio without the expense of having to lay fibre-optic cable to homes and offices.

At Mobile World Congress, Nokia CEO Rajeev Suri proudly showed off a cylindrica­l 5G router standing about a foot tall that will soon provide home internet to a selected group of customers of Australian carrier Optus. “5G is here, it is now, it is today,” he told a presentati­on.

Mobile broadband will follow - in big cities at first - as some of the devices displayed in Barcelona, including Huawei Technologi­es’ $2,600 folding smartphone, enter serial production. For operators, though, 5G is more about finding new ways to use sensors to generate exponentia­l increases in volumes of data — the industry’s stock in trade — to offset the deflation in prices that is now capping revenue growth and squeezing margins.

In Norway, Telenor is trialling 5G applicatio­ns in fish farms; to help drivers find free parking spaces more quickly; and to enable remote monitoring of people with health conditions without them having to visit the hospital.

Telenor also runs a ‘smart’ headquarte­rs for a Norwegian bank - CEO Sigve Brekke’s eyes light up when he says that sensors make it possible to clean the toilets after a certain number of visits, and not at set intervals. “We are moving from an access provider towards more integrated solutions,” Brekke told Reuters. “This is an opportunit­y to create value together with these customers.”

Korea’s KT Telecom showed off a robot barista at its stand, with the device maker paying $50 monthly to cover 5G connectivi­ty. “At that amount, it is not enough, but it’s a new trial to expand our line of business,” said Sung Eunmi of KT’s 5G team. For now, the industry is testing a host of applicatio­ns that could take advantage of so-called network slicing — the ability of 5G to run multiple networks on a single, shared infrastruc­ture. As with natural selection, only the ones that can achieve scale and profitabil­ity will survive.

From mobile gaming to robots, self-driving cars or smart cities — even a sensor with a 10-year battery that can weigh a beehive and say when it’s time to collect honey — the positive news is that the industry is at last trying something new.

 ?? — Reuters ?? The number of devices connected to the IoT will triple to 25 billion by 2025, generating a fourfold rise in revenues to $1.1 trillion.
— Reuters The number of devices connected to the IoT will triple to 25 billion by 2025, generating a fourfold rise in revenues to $1.1 trillion.

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