BT CEO warns of Huawei battle
LONDON (AP) — The CEO of telecoms company BT has warned it may take a decade to remove Huawei equipment from Britain’s wireless infrastructure if the UK government follows the US in dumping the telecom provider from its networks.
Philip Jansen told the BBC that the Chinese tech giant has been in the telecoms infrastructure for two decades and has been a big supplier to the industry.
That legacy will complicate things for British officials, who are reportedly reconsidering their decision to give Huawei a limited role supplying new highspeed network equipment to wireless carriers.
“It is all about timing and balance,’’ Jansen told the BBC. “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.”
Dumping Huawei from the 5G network could take as long as five to seven years. But the details are critical.
Britain had decided in January to let Chinese tech giant Huawei have a limited role supplying new high-speed network equipment to wireless carriers, ignoring the US government’s warnings that it would sever intelligence sharing if the company was not banned.
But the move set up a diplomatic clash with the Americans, who claim that British sovereignty was at risk because the company could give the Chinese government access to data — an allegation Huawei denies.
Amid continued pressure to remove Huawei from communication networks entirely, the US imposed new sanctions aimed at the firm’s supply chain, sparking the UK government review.