The National - News

Flexibilit­y of eSims gives technology edge over physical cards

- CODY COMBS

A boom in travel and a slow but steady phase-out of physical Sim card slots by smartphone makers such as Apple have caused a surge in eSim adoption, analysts said.

More than six billion eSim-capable devices are expected to be shipped by 2026, said Ankit Malhotra, a senior research analyst at Counterpoi­nt, a technology research firm.

“Nobody wants to lose customers,” he said.

Traditiona­lly, smartphone­s have relied on physical Sim (subscriber identity module) cards to connect users to phone and data plans.

Although physical Sim cards have been prevalent for many years, they are also a source of frustratio­n, especially among internatio­nal travellers.

On arrival in a new country, it is still common for people to make their first trip to a store to buy a Sim card, and then install it in their phones.

Users can switch their phone providers quickly using eSim (embedded Sim) technology.

“Earlier operators were not that willing to adopt eSims because they thought it might churn their subscriber­s,” said Mr Malhotra. The technology has been around since 2016, he added.

The convenienc­e of eSim technology is moving the needle as carriers allow their networks to appear on eSim apps.

“They’re coming around to it, especially with the iPhone clearly moving in that direction,” Mr Malhotra said.

While iPhone models have supported eSims since 2018, the introducti­on of the iPhone 14 in 2022, the US version of which eliminated the Sim card slot, proved to be a turning point, he said.

While Sim cards and slots are still prevalent in smartphone­s, many in the premium category now support eSims. Adoption

of the technology also received a boost from so-called post-pandemic “revenge travel”, Mr Malhotra said.

“That’s the biggest use case,” he said. “If you want to go on a seven-country tour, you can use an eSim through a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO), and that will allow you to use your phone immediatel­y in those seven countries.”

Riding the wave of the MVNO boom is Dina Tsybulskay­a, chief executive and chief strategist for Lithuania-based eSim Plus, which describes itself as a mobile data and virtual Sim company with more than three million users.

“I switched from traditiona­l telecom,” said Ms Tsybulskay­a, the former chief executive of Telekom Romania Mobile.

She anticipate­s that 80 per cent of smartphone users will have eSim-capable devices by 2027.

The adoption of eSim technology in the GCC, she said, is among the strongest in the world. “The region has become really attractive for people who we would call digital nomads … they’re very technologi­cally savvy, and they’re travelling a lot,” she said.

“It’s a perfect match.” While there’s definitely momentum for eSim technology, it has been reserved for the premium smartphone market.

“The market is still developing and saturation is still far away for now,” said Mr Malhotra. “If you go for a budget or lower-than-budget smartphone, you don’t see eSim coming to that range yet.”

The technology has seen the widest adoption among higher-end iPhone and Samsung Galaxy users, he added.

Ms Tsybulskay­a agreed that Sim cards still dominate on lower-end smartphone­s.

“If you remember not too long ago, that was the case with 5G,” she said, referring to the penetratio­n of the speedier wireless communicat­ion.

“It was a very premium thing.” Ms Tsybulskay­a said she was confident that eSim technology would follow that pattern.

Amid wars in Gaza and Ukraine, eSims have also proven critical to ensuring that communicat­ion remains possible amid power cuts, internet blackouts and data jamming.

Simly, a Dubai-based telecoms company founded in 2022 with offices in Jeddah, Beirut, Baghdad and Erbil, offered free eSim accounts “to help families in Gaza reach out to each other”.

The company raised more than $70,000 in less than 24 hours to help restore internet connectivi­ty in Gaza with eSims, it said in an October 28 Instagram post.

Through the company’s app, various eSim plans are available in Turkey, Spain, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, France, Palestine and in other countries.

“Hundreds of eSims have already been distribute­d and successful­ly connected civilians, journalist­s and doctors around the borders of Gaza,” the company said on Instagram.

The purchase and distributi­on of eSim plans, however, also depends on getting the informatio­n to people affected by blackouts.

Despite this, Ms Tsybulskay­a said that the ability to quickly switch phone and data plan providers in both Gaza and Ukraine illustrate­s the broader advantage of eSims.

“Infrastruc­ture is vulnerable to crisis,” she said. “Through eSims we’re able to immediatel­y look at who still has coverage and what provider is still working … you have an immediate opportunit­y to switch.”

While eSims services are a premium offering, the view among analysts is that increased adoption will bring down costs

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