China on Course for Full 5G Rollout
This post comes courtesy of our content partners at TechNode.
China looks to be on course to offer a commercial 5G network at roughly the same time as developed nations. China Telecom has connected its base towers in Lanzhou, making the city the sixth in just over a month to host a 5G pilot area.
At the end of November, the National Development and Reform Commission said
the country’s 5G network would start to take shape with pilots in at
least five cities, as part of a broader plan for 2018. Then on Dec 1, Chengdu became the fifth host to announce a pilot.
Each test area has six to eight base stations and Shenzhen was the first to get a pilot 5G network in Oct 27. Xinhua has now reported that the pilot covers an area that is home to a large number of high-tech companies in the Shenzhen Software Industry Base, the Shuangchuangyuan innovation park, the Shenzhen University Campus, and Hong Kong Polytechnic University Incubation Base in Shenzhen.
On Nov 8, China Telecom announced that Xiong’an,
the site for a totally new city outside Beijing, had begun its pilot,
with initial field tests showing the network to be 20 times faster than
4G.
On Nov 10, Suzhou was announced alongside Shanghai to be the fourth pilot.
China
Telecom’s plan is to conduct lab and field testing in 2017-18 in
preparation for a partial commercial rollout in 2019 and full-scale
rollout in 2020.
Previous advances in mobile network technology
saw China lagging behind but with regards to the move to 5G, China seems
to be in line with other countries. Policy changes have been made
accordingly to help the technology benefit the “Made in China 2025” campaign.
Chen Zhaoxiong, vice minister of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology,
said at a conference in June that China has conducted a full range of
5G technology research and development, including large-scale antennas
and ultra-dense networking. This predicts that China will join other
countries for a 2019-20 launch. China has previously announced
collaborations with other regions to boost the technology’s rollout.
Another requirement for the success of the 5G network is demand. One of the panels at last week’s Wuzhen’s World Internet Conference agreed that China’s mix of mobile internet dependency and big data make it highly likely to succeed in terms of user rates.
Photo: Bien Perez/SCMP (i-scmp.com)
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