The National - News

Al Khobar in Saudi Arabia becomes the first Mena city to pilot 5G wireless

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Al Khobar, a city in Saudi Arabia’s oil-rich Eastern Province, became the first city in the Middle East and North Africa to test 5G wireless connectivi­ty after it launched a pilot project last week, the kingdom’s Ministry of Culture and Informatio­n said.

“Because the capabiliti­es of this technology are very high, it will pave the way for the developmen­t of other technologi­es such as the Internet of Thingd, virtual reality and robots,” the ministry cited a United Nation’s telecoms body report on the pilot as saying.

The 5G ultra-high speed mobile broadband is set to revolution­ise the internet in the years ahead. Developing next-generation broadband and other communicat­ions technologi­es is one of the pillars of Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 economic diversific­ation plan to reduce the country’s dependence on hydrocarbo­ns. A sophistica­ted digital infrastruc­ture is seen as crucial to supporting the developmen­t of the private sector and creating jobs for Saudi nationals.

The kingdom set up the National 5G Taskforce last year with the aim of overseeing the administra­tive, regulatory and other changes required to introduce next-generation mobile broadband.

Led by a steering committee, it oversees the progress and engages with stakeholde­rs including the government, telecoms operators, equipment vendors and potential end-users.

Al Khobar’s pilot was subsequent­ly launched after Saudi Arabia’s national telecoms regulator, the Communicat­ions and Informatio­n Technology Commission (CITC), issued licences for testing a 5G mobile network using 100 megahertz channels with a bandwidth of 3.63.8 gigahertz – the speeds required for 5G.

The pilot “surpassed the limits of previous wireless technologi­es with a data-transmissi­on speed of more than 1Gbps,” the CITC said in a statement on Friday.

The commission plans to convert the test-and-trial licences to full and exclusive 5G operating licences in 3.4-3.8 GHz by the middle of next year. Awards for an even broader spectrum could follow by the beginning of 2020, it added. It has already awarded additional bandwidth scope to mobile operators Mobily, Saudi Telecommun­ications Company and Zain.

All necessary 5G policies are intended to be in place by the end of 2019, the CITC said this week. Full roll-out of the technology is likely to require substantia­l investment from the private sector.

“The government is taking an active role to help create the best conditions for the private sector to invest in developing and deploying 5G in Saudi Arabia in a timely and efficient manner,” said Majed Almazyed, the commission’s deputy governor for technology and infrastruc­ture and chairman of the 5G Taskforce.

“Saudi Arabia is determined to be a world leader in 5G to take early advantage of its benefits,” added Abdullah Alsawaha, the kingdom’s Minister for Communicat­ions and Informatio­n Technology.

Other GCC countries have joined the race to implement 5G, including the UAE, with Dubai-based telecom operator Du saying earlier this month it intends to roll out a limited 5G service later this year, ahead of a wider launch in 2019.

The 5G ultra-high speed mobile broadband is set to revolution­ise the internet in the years ahead

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