Houston Chronicle

HUAWEI FIGHT IS A THREAT TO RURAL INTERNET

- By Suhauna Hussain and Alice Su

In swaths of rural America, along roads where there are just a few farms or homes within a mile-long stretch, customers are so few that the likes of AT&T and T-Mobile don’t bother to build cell towers for coverage.

The only operators providing wireless access are small carriers, many of which can’t afford equipment from suppliers such as Ericsson and Nokia Corp. and instead rely on cheaper network infrastruc­ture from Huawei Technologi­es Co. and other Chinese companies.

President Trump’s move last week to bar U.S. telecommun­ications networks from acquiring or using equipment from foreign suppliers left these small broadband companies under a cloud of uncertaint­y. If they can no longer rely on affordable foreign equipment to run their networks, will they run at all?

“Small carriers face a constant uphill battle both in terms of limited vendors who will supply to us, compounded by the regulatory challenges we’re up against,” said John Nettles, president of Pine Belt Communicat­ions, a small telecommun­ications company in Alabama that relies on the Chinese company ZTE Corp. for its 4G network. “Sometimes it feels like the cards are really stacked against us.”

Last week, the U.S. Commerce Department separately added Huawei and its affiliates to a list of firms considered a risk to national security, effectivel­y preventing Huawei from buying parts from American companies.

Huawei immediatel­y began to feel the effects of the administra­tion’s crackdown, with Google initially cutting off Huawei from many Android hardware and software services. (After the Commerce Department announced a 90-day buffer period, Google walked back, saying it would continue to work with Huawei in the meantime). U.S. companies such as Qualcomm Inc. and Intel Corp., which provide the Shenzhen telecommun­ications giant with crucial chips and other special parts, told employees they wouldn’t supply Huawei until further notice.

The move also left rural broadband companies that use Huawei equipment scrambling to figure out what it might mean for their day-to-day operations. Though small carriers don’t export to Huawei, they often need to send technical drawings or data to Huawei in order to maintain their current network infrastruc­ture.

The 90-day window announced by the Commerce Department on Monday allows companies that rely on Huawei equipment for crucial services to continue operations for now.

“In short, this license will allow operations to continue for existing Huawei mobile phone users and rural broadband networks,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a news release. Ross had indicated last week that his department was not looking to harm rural providers.

More pressing to the carriers is the executive order, which the administra­tion will shape over the next five months.

Rural broadband carriers could be forced to rip out and replace entire networks because they wouldn’t be able to import spare parts or software updates to maintain infrastruc­ture, said Roger Entner, a telecom analyst at Recon Analytics.

“If something breaks, what are you going to tell your customer? ‘I’m sorry you have an outage. We don’t know when we are going to fix it because it’s Huawei equipment. Until then, sorry. No internet for you,’ ” Entner said. “You don’t want to tell that to a customer.”

Nettles estimates that replacing Pine Belt’s network would cost $5 million to $10 million. And downtime from installing new equipment would probably cause Pine Belt to forgo $1 million to $3 million in roaming fees, according to Federal Communicat­ions Commission filings.

Carri Bennet, general counsel for the Rural Wireless Assn., a trade group for carriers with fewer than 100,000 subscriber­s, said her organizati­on is waiting to see how the Trump administra­tion’s move will affect members. She estimated that 25% of the associatio­n’s members used Huawei or ZTE gear in their networks.

“When something new comes up, we’re sent scrambling,” Nettles said. “What it’s going to mean for us in the long term is difficult to say at best.”

Nettles’ company is small, with about 40 employees and some 60 cell sites. That’s a “drop in the bucket” for big companies such as Ericsson and Nokia, which often don’t see a reason to scale down their services for such small accounts, Nettles said.

Whereas national carriers operate in more densely populated parts of the region, Pine Belt covers many of the roads farmers regularly travel - areas overlooked by big providers. Its 4G network offers rural drivers cell service and even provides household internet access in areas without broadband cable.

“I’m aware of the need to have secure networks. We’re not trying to suggest security is not an important considerat­ion,” Nettles said. “But how do you balance it with providing service to underserve­d markets — which is mainly where we operate?”

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s Universal Service Fund funnels money to smaller telecom companies — including members of the Rural Wireless Assn. — to provide internet services in rural areas.

Since June 2018, a group of rural broadband companies have been fighting an FCC proposal that would ban the use of federal subsidies to purchase Huawei and other Chinese equipment that might pose a national security threat.

In a series of filings to the FCC, the Rural Broadband Coalition argued the ban would force many small rural broadband providers into bankruptcy.

Sagebrush Cellular, a cell service provider in northeast Montana, said that when it considered options for 4G deployment, Lucent equipment was double the price of Huawei. Ericsson technology was almost four times the cost of Huawei equipment.

One unnamed prominent alternativ­e vendor didn’t even give Sagebrush a price quote, according to the filing, stating only that a small company would be “unable to afford them.”

Sagebrush moved forward with Huawei, spending more than $25 million on its equipment.

It would cost Sagebrush an estimated $57 million to replace its network, the company said in the filing.

Its network size would shrink by two-thirds, losing coverage in many areas where Sagebrush is the only wireless carrier, including 173 miles of the U.S.-Canadian border.

The FCC proposal is still pending, as it awaits guidance from the Trump administra­tion on how it should proceed.

 ??  ?? Lam Yik Fei / Minneapoli­s Star Tribune President Donald Trump’s move to bar U.S. telecommun­ications networks from using equipment from foreign suppliers has left small broadband companies under a cloud of uncertaint­y.
Lam Yik Fei / Minneapoli­s Star Tribune President Donald Trump’s move to bar U.S. telecommun­ications networks from using equipment from foreign suppliers has left small broadband companies under a cloud of uncertaint­y.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States