Global Times

Britain can’t afford a complete Huawei cutoff: experts

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: shenweiduo@globaltime­s.com.cn

The UK can’t afford to reverse course on Huawei’s involvemen­t in its 5G network rollout, Chinese experts said on Monday, urging London not to hit the self-destruct button in terms of its economic ties with Beijing.

If UK telecoms giants are ordered to phase out Huawei’s equipment, as urged by some members of the UK’s ruling Conservati­ve Party, the nation will suffer mobile phone blackouts for 10 days or two weeks, the Sunday Times reported over the weekend.

Two British majors – BT and Vodafone, which are heavily reliant on Huawei equipment in their 4G networks – are lobbying fiercely against the push to cut off Huawei by 2023, the newspaper said. The two would need to strip out roughly 19,000 mobile phone masts across Britain if the Huawei ban materializ­es.

There is little chance of the UK eventually opting to entirely phase out Huawei equipment, as there are no alternativ­es to the Chinese telecom giant’s 5G offerings as measured by both technologi­cal strength and affordabil­ity, Xiang Ligang, director-general of the Beijing-based Informatio­n Consumptio­n Alliance, told the Global Times on Monday.

The UK government, under pressure from the US, is wobbling on its adoption of Huawei technology, as part of its wider China policy, thereby putting British telecom operators in an awkward position, he said.

Xiang said that a coercive shift toward Nokia and Ericsson equipment would mean a 20-30 percent increase in costs for UK operators.

The proposed ban deviates from UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s approval in January of a “limited” role for Huawei in building the nation’s 5G infrastruc­ture. A potential thaw in China-US relations is likely to swing the UK back toward a pro-China stance, Xiang remarked.

When asked to confirm media reports that US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will meet senior Chinese diplomat Yang Jiechi in Hawaii, Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Zhao Lijian said on Monday that China and the US have maintained communicat­ions through diplomatic channels.

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