New problems for embattled Huawei in France and Germany
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[December 14, 2018]
By Douglas Busvine and Gwénaëlle Barzic
FRANKFURT/PARIS (Reuters) - Huawei [HWT.UL]
faces fresh challenges in Europe after France's Orange said it would not
hire the Chinese firm to build its next-generation network and Germany's
Deutsche Telekom announced it would review its vendor strategy.
The shift by the national market leaders, both partly state owned,
follows Huawei's exclusion on national security grounds by some U.S.
allies, led by Australia, from building their fifth-generation (5G)
mobile networks.
U.S. officials have briefed allies that Huawei is ultimately at the beck
and call of the Chinese state, while warning that its network equipment
may contain "back doors" that could open them up to cyber espionage.
Huawei says those concerns are unfounded. Tensions have been heightened
by the arrest of Huawei's chief financial officer in Canada for possible
extradition to the United States.
"We don't foresee calling on Huawei for 5G," Orange CEO Stephane Richard
told reporters in Paris. "We are working with our traditional partners -
they are Ericsson and Nokia."
Richard said he considered the security concerns to be legitimate: "I
absolutely understand that all of our countries, and the French
authorities, are preoccupied. We are too."
Responding, Huawei said it was not a supplier to Orange's existing 4G
network in France and would not feature in the company's 5G plans in
France. Huawei does supply Orange's networks outside France and expects
to be involved in 5G there, it said.
U.S. EXPOSURE
Deutsche Telekom, Europe's largest telecoms company, said it was
reviewing its vendor plans given the debate on the security of Chinese
network gear in Germany and the other European markets where it
operates.
"Deutsche Telekom takes the global discussion about the security of
network equipment from Chinese vendors very seriously," the company said
in response to a Reuters query.
Telekom already pursues a multi-vendor strategy, relying above all on
equipment from Ericsson, Nokia, Cisco and Huawei. "Nevertheless we are
reassessing our procurement strategy," it said.
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People walk past a Huawei shop in Beijing, China, December 11, 2018.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter
The shift is significant because, so far, German officials have said they see no
legal basis to exclude any vendors from the buildout of fifth-generation
networks in response to the warnings from Washington.
Nearly half of the German company's revenues come, however, from its profitable
and fast-growing U.S. unit T-Mobile, which is undergoing regulatory scrutiny of
its $26 billion bid to take over Sprint Corp.
A source at one competitor said: "This looks like an appeasement strategy
towards the U.S. government over the Sprint deal."
Other German telecoms players say, meanwhile, that they are continuing talks
with Chinese vendors as they draw up proposals to take part in Germany's auction
of 5G licences in early 2019.
"We are watching the discussion very closely, but we will not participate in the
current speculation," said Telefonica Deutschland, Germany's No.3 operator that
has existing relationships with Huawei and ZTE, another Chinese vendor.
United Internet, a potential new entrant that is weighing bidding for a 5G
licence, said it was in talks with two vendors on its strategy - one of which is
Chinese. A spokesman declined to identify the vendor but according to media
reports it is ZTE.
Analysts say German telecoms operators depend heavily on Huawei, meaning it will
be hard to rip out and replace its existing gear or to cope without the Chinese
company, the world's top network supplier, in building their 5G networks.
"If the Chinese companies are excluded, this would reduce the number of vendors
– and that could drive costs higher,” said Hans Schotten of the Technical
University in Kaiserslautern.
"For that reason, many vendors would be reluctant to do without Huawei."
(Additional reporting by Gwenaelle Barzic and Nadine Schimroszik; Editing by
Gopakumar Warrier and Keith Weir)
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