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Huawei Ryan Ding: Open Collaboration Will Help Bring About a Single 5G Standard

Sep 27, 2016

[Brussels, Belgium, September 27, 2016] At the FT-ETNO Summit held in Brussels, Huawei Executive Director and Products and Solutions President Ryan Ding spoke about how, for 5G to become a cornerstone of industry digitalization, a single global standard will be vital.

Talking during a panel session, Ding noted that developing a common standard for 5G will require open cooperation between all regions and countries, including Europe, Asia, and the Americas. In terms of technology, we should avoid multiple standards or standards lagging behind deployment. In terms of a 5G spectrum, we will need a global agreement on which spectrum will be made easily available. This way, we can cut costs and enable seamless interconnectivity around the world.


Ryan Ding at a panel session at the FT-ETNO Summit

During the panel session entitled, ‘Industry interview: Lessons in innovation, across continents and into technology’, Ding explained that there have been three waves of industry digitalization. In the first wave, Internet companies like Google and Amazon were the leaders. The second wave is currently sweeping traditional service industries such as telecom and financial services, while the third wave is just starting in the real economy, in industries such as automobile, manufacturing, and power grids. The next decade will be a decade of digitalization of traditional industries. During this process, industries will play a key role and connectivity will be the cornerstone.

Europe has many leading global companies in telecoms, finance, manufacturing, and automobiles, where the second and third waves of the digital revolution are taking place. These companies will be the leaders of industry digitalization. And Europe has the opportunity to be a leader in this area.

Ding added that a digital industry has three defining characteristics: all things are connected, all things are able to sense, and all things are intelligent. From connections between people to connections between things, 5G will be a key technology. Many regions and countries – such as the EU, China, the US, Japan, and South Korea – are pushing for 5G development. The EU, for example, released its 5G Action Plan on September 14. A single, global 5G standard is vital to reducing the cost of connectivity and bringing forward 5G deployment. There were three standards for 3G, and it took ten years for 3G technology to finally be commercially deployed.

There were also two competing standards for 4G, and real deployment took just five years. Europe played a leading role in bringing about uniformity in the standards for 3G and 4G and Huawei believe that Europe will also play a positive role in bringing about a single global standard for 5G.

According to Ding, as industries are going digital, governments should become more open; they should set policies to promote cross-regional and cross-industry collaboration, and push for uniform standards. This can drive down the cost of industry digitization and accelerate innovation. The EU is bringing an open approach to the next generation of global communications standards and industry digitalization standards.

The EU-led 5G Private-Public Partnership (5G PPP) includes members from both Europe and other parts of the world, such as Huawei, NEC, NTT DOCOMO, Samsung, and IBM. More companies from outside China are now involved in China's 5G development and other related programs. For example, the members of the IMT 2020 5G Promotion Group not only include Chinese companies but also international ones like Nokia, Ericsson, Samsung, NTT DOCOMO and Qualcomm.

In August 2016, Huawei, Ericsson, and Nokia were jointly awarded the contracts for three key research projects in wireless technology funded by the Chinese government; and Ericsson and Nokia are now members of seven of China's 5G programs. Many other European companies like Siemens, SAP, Bosch, Volkswagen, Audi, and BMW are also playing a role in China's smart manufacturing and connected car projects.

Europe is Huawei's most important global center of expertise. We have more than 10,000 employees in Europe, of whom over 76% were hired in Europe. To support industry digitization, Huawei will increase its investment in supporting European developers, so that ICT SMEs and individual developers in Europe can play a role in industry digitization and innovation.

Huawei plans to invest more than EUR 75 million by 2020 in supporting European developers. As part of the plan, Huawei will establish three Open Labs in the UK, Germany, and Italy to offer support to between 50,000 and 100,000 developers. In addition, with Huawei's global digital marketing platform, developers can reach out to the world market as soon as they enter into a contract with Huawei. This will help Europe's innovative, digital enterprises expand into the global market.