Spark Conducts “First NZ Live Trial” of 5G
(Security robots could benefit from 5G technology as it would allow them to stream footage faster in higher definition)
Curran got a download speed of 9.3 gigabits-per-second when she pressed the button on speed-test equipment on a van parked a few hundred feet away from two 5G antennas that Spark has erected on the Stout St Exchange Building.
(left: Huawei NZ CEO Yanek Fan, middle: NZ Communications Minister Clare Curran, right: Spark CEO Simon Moutter)
Moutter said 5G – the next big step up from 4G mobile technology – would transform the way people lived and worked.
"It will deliver significantly faster speeds and more capacity than previous generations of mobile technology and will support massive connectivity of multiple devices."
By 2020 it was estimated there would be at least four internet-connected devices for everyone on the planet, Moutter said.
The higher speeds and lower lag of 5G would be important for innovations such as driverless electric cars, he said.
Spark said 5G would allow driverless cars to respond to changes in road conditions in a hundredth of a second.
"We are well advanced at Spark in our planning for 5G and we do intend to lead this change," Moutter said.
People could expect 5G services from Spark in about 2020, or perhaps earlier if the Government allocated the necessary radio spectrum before then, he said.
The technology for Spark's 5G trial was provided by their Innovation and Tech partner Huawei.
Moutter said Spark would open a 5G lab in Auckland later this year to give customers the opportunity to develop applications and run trials.
Communications Minister Clare Curran said she would take proposals to Cabinet later this year on the process and timing for allocating 5G spectrum.
The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment released a discussion document on 5G on Monday.
It said the international standards for 5G were not fully in place, but "its key specifications and technological building blocks" were being developed and tested.
The ministry said the media had raised the question of whether there was "room" in New Zealand for multiple 5G networks or whether it would be more cost-effective to build a single network that would be shared between operators.
A single, shared 5G network was being considered in the United States because of network security concerns, it noted.
But the ministry said taking a similar approach here could delay the technology.
"New Zealand has sufficient spectrum available for 5G to support the roll-out of at least three national networks.
"All cellular mobile network operators have indicated their desire to build their own 5G network and compete at the infrastructure level. Given this, there would have to be strong public policy reasons to prevent this occurring," it said.