Houston Chronicle

Global race to 5G tech is on

Report finds U.S. has early lead in next-generation wireless market

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U.S. policymake­rs keep wringing their hands over a competitio­n with China to build the world’s first massmarket 5G wireless network. But a new report from Cisco may offer reasons to breathe easier.

By 2022, fifth-generation cellular networks will power as many as 9 percent of mobile data connection­s across North America, Cisco said, compared with 4 percent in Asia. The new projection­s were unveiled Tuesday as part of Cisco’s annual mobile Virtual Networking Index report, which studies industry trends.

The results underscore the substantia­l work countries like China face as they seek to out-develop Western nations. And they reflect early U.S. policies that put it in a strong position to lead, said Cisco, which makes networking technology.

Proponents say 5G will offer download speeds faster than what many households receive on their home internet connection­s. And, they say, 5G’s reliabilit­y will unlock new capabiliti­es such as self-driving cars, remote medicine and a thriving ecosystem of smart appliances that require a constant connection.

Although the Asia-Pacific region will be home to more than twice the number of 5G devices compared with North America by 2022, it will account for a tiny share of the 422 million devices on 5G worldwide, according to Cisco. North America will account for the largest slice; most of the rest, about 6.5 percent, will come from Western Europe.

Tuesday marks the first time Cisco has dedicated an entire section in its mobile report to 5G technology.

“The U.S. has made a good start in changing policies to support the deployment of 5G, and as we look around the rest of the world, policy changes of the type we’ve seen here in the U.S. have not yet happened,” said Mary Brown, senior director of government affairs at Cisco. “We do expect that’s going to be changing over the next 12 to 18 months, and so the race to 5G is very real.”

A head start in 5G penetratio­n could be critical for determinin­g which countries get to shape innovation­s in apps, services and other economic fruits of the technology, according to policy analysts. When the United States took the lead on 4G mobile technology, it gave rise to the app economy, which remains dominated by U.S.-based firms today, said Brown.

“The stakes with 5G are even higher,” she said.

For now, a true 5G experience remains out of reach for the average consumer. The first 5G smartphone­s aren’t expected until later this year; in the meantime, carriers such as AT&T and Verizon have been locked in a marketing war to convince customers that they’re making rapid progress

Telecom executives, and many federal officials, have cited intense competitio­n against global rivals as a reason to accelerate the spread of 5G in the United States with deregulati­on and policies favorable to the industry.

“U.S. leadership in 5G technology is a national imperative for economic growth and competitiv­eness,” said Ajit Pai, chairman of the Federal Communicat­ions Commission, last year. He added: “We cannot let today’s red tape strangle the 5G future.”

Last year, in a bid to grease processes at the local level, the FCC moved to limit how much cities could charge telecom companies for using publicly owned utility poles, and it required swifter decisions on infrastruc­ture permits.

The plan was welcomed by industry groups as a crucial step toward building 5G, but it was assailed by other critics who said it amounted to a massive corporate handout.

“This effectivel­y transfers $2 billion from cities to carriers,” wrote Blair Levin, a former FCC chief of staff, in a blog post this week. “In return, the FCC asks carriers for nothing.”

Complicati­ng the picture are ongoing concerns about the security of networking equipment from companies such as China’s Huawei, which the Trump administra­tion is expected to target with an executive order. The FCC, in a separate move, has proposed limiting federal funding to U.S. telecom companies that use Huawei’s hardware. Policymake­rs worry that foreign manufactur­ers could secretly install spyware in their products that could allow other government­s to eavesdrop on sensitive U.S. communicat­ions. Huawei’s founder on Tuesday rejected those claims as speculatio­n in an interview with CBS.

The uncertaint­y surroundin­g U.S. infrastruc­ture policy, Washington’s stance on foreign firms and the details of 5G technology that are still being hammered out could result in delays.

 ?? Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press ?? Ignacio Contreras, of Qualcomm Technologi­es, exhibits the new Qualcomm 5G platform network at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas last month.
Ross D. Franklin / Associated Press Ignacio Contreras, of Qualcomm Technologi­es, exhibits the new Qualcomm 5G platform network at CES Internatio­nal in Las Vegas last month.

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