EU countries, lawmakers strike deal to open up spectrum
for 5G
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[March 03, 2018]
By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - EU countries and
lawmakers have struck a deal to free up radio frequencies for
next-generation 5G services that will be valid for 20 years, as the bloc
tries to catch up with the United States and China in rolling out
internet-connected products.
Telecoms lobbying group ETNO, whose members include Orange, Telefonica
and Telecom Italia, criticized the deal, however, saying it lacked
ambition and that a timeframe of at least 25 years was needed.
The provisional agreement late on Thursday came after months of
squabbling between EU governments seeking to guard a lucrative source of
revenue and cash-strapped telecoms providers looking for new ways to
boost profits.
Next-generation 5G services promise to deliver not just faster phones
and video, but also connected cars and internet-connected industrial
sensors over the next decade.
Under the agreement, 5G will be available throughout the bloc by 2020,
with spectrum guaranteed for a minimum of 20 years.
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The deal will facilitate the roll-out of connected vehicles, health-related
services, smart cities and incentivize telecoms operators to speed up 5G
networks, Pilar del Castillo, the European Parliament's lead negotiator on the
issue, said.
The issue is part of the European Commission's reforms of telecoms rules known
as the European Electronic Communications Code. The EU executive wants to get
formal agreement on this topic during Bulgaria's presidency of the bloc which
ends in June.
Commission digital chief Andrius Ansip said the deal should spur all involved
parties to agree on other reforms.
ETNO chairman Phillip Malloch said the reforms should have been bolder.
"5G will not be accelerated by a piecemeal reform, as Europe requires strong
peer review and predictable licenses of at least 25 years. It appears
negotiations still lack the ambitious direction everyone was looking for," he
said.
China is the world's biggest 5G market by far.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; Editing by Mark Potter)
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