Western Mail

BT boss says Huawei hard to ‘rip out’ of UK telecoms

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sion.barry@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE boss of BT has warned that it would be “impossible” to strip Huawei products out of the UK’s telecommun­ications network within the next decade.

He also warned of “outages” and possible security risks if the sector was told to curtail all business with the Chinese technology giant during the building of the 5G network upgrade.

It follows suggestion­s that a decision is due to be made public by Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden today over the future of Huawei in the UK.

Speaking last week, Mr Dowden said US sanctions on Huawei were likely to have a “significan­t impact” on the firm’s ability to play a role in the UK’s 5G network.

Since then, Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove has said a decision on Huawei would be made by the National Security Council and announced to Parliament.

BT chief executive Philip Jansen told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “Huawei has been in the telecoms infrastruc­ture for about 20 years and a big supplier to BT and many others in the UK telecoms industry. It is all about timing and balance. So if you want to have no Huawei in the whole of the telecoms infrastruc­ture across the whole of the UK, I think that’s impossible to do in under 10 years.”

The industry would want to be given a seven-year window to rip out Huawei from the 5G network, but Mr Jansen said “we could probably do it in five”.

Mr Jansen warned there would be consequenc­es as a result of rejecting business with the Far East firm: “We always, at BT and in our discussion­s with GCHQ, we always take the [view] that security is paramount; it is our numberone priority,” he continued. “But we need to make sure that any change of direction doesn’t lead to more risk in the short term – I think that’s where the detail really matters.

“If we get in a situation where things need to go very fast, then we go into a situation where service for 24 million BT Group mobile customers is put into question – outages would be possible. Secondly, the security and safety in the short term could be put at risk – this is really critical here.

“If you are not able to buy or transact with Huawei, that would mean you wouldn’t be able to get software upgrades if you take it to its specificit­y.”

He said there was a danger that “accelerati­ng the rip-out” of Huawei from the 5G network meant that effort was not being put into extending the service provision across the country.

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