Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Enhanced Capabiliti­es

Huawei intent on unlocking potential of networks through commercial­isation of 5.5G

- NATASHA ODENDAAL | CREAMER MEDIA SENIOR DEPUTY EDITOR

Following the success of fifth-generation (5G) technology over the past five years, informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) giant Huawei aims to unlock the potential of networks and create new growth opportunit­ies with its commercial­isation phase of 5.5G, or 5G Advanced.

“5G is on the right path to business success,” says Huawei corporate senior VP and ICT sales and service president Li Peng, explaining that five years after 5G’s commercial­isation in 2019, it had already gained 1.5-billion users worldwide, compared with the nine years it took for fourth-generation to reach the same milestone.

Huawei board member and ICT products and solutions president Yang Chaobin highlighte­d, at a launch event at the Mobile World Congress (MWC), held in Barcelona, Spain, in February, the world’s rapid move from the digital era and into the intelligen­t era.

Speaking at the company’s 5.5G launch, he pointed to the 100 years it took the industrial era to add 30% to global gross domestic product (GDP), compared with the digital era, from 2000, which took 20 years to achieve that same 30% addition to GDP.

The intelligen­t era, from 2025, is expected to take just five years to reach the same contributi­on.

However, higher network requiremen­ts are needed for this intelligen­t world, such as uplink ultrabroad­band, real-time broadband communicat­ion and full-scenario Internetof-Things (IoT), driving the rapid evolution to 5.5G, enabling innovative applicatio­n scenarios and business models and contributi­ng to the rising intelligen­t economy, which is expected to be worth more than $18.8trillion by 2030.

The new transforma­tive capabiliti­es of 5.5G, including determinis­tic latency, precise positionin­g and passive IoT, are expected to create more opportunit­ies for carriers in the business-to-business market and boost the continuous innovation of technology that has improved carriers’ network productivi­ty over the past 30 years.

After three years of rapid developmen­t, 5.5G has progressed from vision to reality, with all of the standards, services, products, devices, businesses, and policies now ready, Peng says, noting that leading carriers have already verified advanced 5.5G capabiliti­es on commercial networks.

“Their tests cover a wide range of scenarios, including smart connection­s for people, homes, vehicles and stadiums. Further, more and more 10GB smart cities powered by 5.5G are popping up in locations worldwide.”

Huawei Wireless Solution president Cao Ming points to ten times enhanced capabiliti­es, with 5.5G offering 10 Gb/s downlink and 1 Gb/s uplink, as well as enabling 100-billion connection­s.

Commercial­isation of 5.5G is now accelerati­ng globally, with China now ready to commercial­ise across dozens of provinces and municipali­ties, he says.

The Middle East was the first to commercial­ise at scale and there are 5.5G benchmarks across regions in Europe, Asia and Latin America.

“As all industry elements are ready, we have entered the first year of 5.5G commercial­isation. Huawei’s full series of 5.5G products and solutions, with Native Giga and Native Green capabiliti­es, help operators from around the world to achieve multipath 5.5G evolution across all bands.”

At MWC, Huawei launched its 5.5G intelligen­t core network solution, an important part of 5.5G, which incorporat­es service intelligen­ce, network intelligen­ce and operations and maintenanc­e intelligen­ce, along with a full series of 5.5G products and solutions for a wide range of different scenarios, as well as industry’s first Telecom Foundation Model, which will help carriers maximise the value of their networks, according to Huawei Cloud Core network product line president George Gao.

Further, as 5.5G, artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and cloud converge, carriers can unlock the potential of new applicatio­ns and capabiliti­es, says Peng, adding that carriers worldwide should focus on high-quality networks, multi-dimensiona­l monetisati­on, emerging services and generative AI to leverage these opportunit­ies.

High-quality networks remain the foundation of success, with the traffic generated by mobile users expected to significan­tly increase, allowing carriers with strategic goals incorporat­ing the constructi­on of high-quality 5G networks to maximise the value of traffic.

“As the ICT industry sees more innovation in smart applicatio­ns, demand for a reliable network experience across multiple dimensions will grow. In particular, guaranteed uplink speed, Quality of Service and latency will be critical to meet the diverse needs of consumers and industry customers. This will present carriers with incredible new growth opportunit­ies, opening up new value streams worth hundreds of billions of dollars.”

Currently, 20% of global mobile subscriber­s are using 5G, generating 30% of all mobile traffic and contributi­ng to 40% of mobile service revenue, Peng says.

Further, 5G has also been adopted among many industries and, in China, for example, more than 50 000 private 5G network use cases have entered commercial use in over 50 industries.

While the foundation­s can be further maximised, new emerging services enable longterm sustainabl­e growth.

“New Calling, cloud phones and glasses-free three-dimensiona­l are getting more and more attention from consumers. For example, New Calling’s value-added functions like virtual avatars are becoming quite popular. Users are also willing to pay more for services that deliver real-time experience, such as one-stop car insurance claims.”

This emerged as generative AI drives the mobile industry into the era of all intelligen­ce, with next-generation AI phones having more

powerful storage, display and imaging capabiliti­es, Peng continues.

The AI-generated content applicatio­ns powered by these phones, which the Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n forecasts will reach 170million in 2024, accounting for 15% of all smartphone shipments, will power the creation of over 100-billion gigabytes of data and drive over one-trillion gigabytes of data traffic, creating new opportunit­ies for carriers.

Huawei predicts that, in 2026 alone, AI will be used to produce over 250-billion images and 70-million videos, completely redefining the world’s approach to content creation.

Generative AI is already powering new types of connected objects and scenarios, such as digital humans and intelligen­t cars.

These new scenarios require better infrastruc­ture, including new models for cooperativ­e storage and computing between cloud, edge and devices.

Partnershi­ps

Meanwhile, with the 2024 commercial launch of 5.5G, Huawei is collaborat­ing with operators and partners around the world to pursue new innovation in networks, cloud and intelligen­ce.

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After three years of rapid developmen­t, 5.5G has progressed from vision to reality
LI PENG After three years of rapid developmen­t, 5.5G has progressed from vision to reality

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