Volkswagen a winner as EU set to favour wifi over 5G:
draft
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[October 19, 2018]
By Foo Yun Chee
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Commission is set to
approve and set rules for the use of wifi in cars, giving Volkswagen and
Renault who have pursued this technology the edge over Daimler and
others who invested in rival 5G networks.
The EU executive is expected to announce draft legislation on the issue
next month for feedback from EU countries and EU lawmakers before
adopting it next year.
The decision is a crucial one for both carmakers and telecoms operators
and equipment makers as the market for internet connected cars is
expected to be worth billions of euros a year.
While connected cars have been available for some years in Europe, the
Commission wants to speed up their deployment and encourage cooperation
between manufacturers to make safer and more efficient cars via
legislation.
Such legal protection and regulatory-approved technical specifications
would also reassure car buyers and auto insurance companies, advantages
which cars equipped with a rival technology would not have.
The latest draft of the proposed rules seen by Reuters paves the way for
cars equipped with wifi called ITS-G5 to hit the roads in Europe while
regulators will review the rules at the latest three years after its
implementation to take into account any new technologies.
This could mean that the alternative 5G standard called C-V2X could take
months or even years to win approval. Supporters however expect a
shorter timeframe.
RIVAL CAMPS
The issue has pitted two powerful groups of carmakers, chipmakers and
telecoms providers against each other. Connected cars are seen as
lucrative targets for online retailers and advertisers.
Volkswagen, Renault, NXP, Autotalks and Kapsch TrafficCom are pushing
ITS-G5, which they say has been sufficiently tested and fully
standardised in European government-funded projects.
However, 5G backers include big names like Daimler, Ford, PSA Group,
Deutsche Telekom, Ericsson, Huawei [HWT.UL], Intel, Qualcomm and
Samsung. They say that C-V2X has wider application and is future-proof.
Backers of C-V2X say it can hook up to both cars and devices in the
surrounding environment, with a wider range of applications in areas
such as entertainment, traffic data and general navigation where data
speeds or signal failure are less of an issue.
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Workers clean the facade of a car showroom under a Volkswagen logo
on the Chinese National Day in Beijing, China October 1, 2018.
Picture taken October 1, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer
Fans of ITS-G5, which is primarily for connecting cars to other cars, say it is
better for time-critical communications involved in crash avoidance and object
navigation.
The EU executive declined to comment on the draft. It said: "Currently the
Commission is looking into the best European framework to promote the right
investments in this area and ensure interoperability between the existing
systems and the development of new technologies."
In effect, the decision puts the region at loggerheads with the United States
and China which see C-V2X, using cellular networks, as the way forward.
Some EU countries such as Spain, Sweden, Finland and Norway had called for a
postponement of the proposed rules because of the diverging views on the topic.
Following intense lobbying, France, which supports the wifi-based technology,
came up with a compromise clause which is now under discussion.
Its proposal, seen by Reuters, would force the Commission to revise the rules in
less than 12 months if a new technology is approved. The paper also calls for
all involved parties to cooperate to ensure a level playing field between
different technologies.
Lobbying group and C-V2X supporter 5GAA said that is not enough.
"A legislation confined to a wifi based communication would send a negative
message about Europe's commitment to 5G, and is contrary to the objectives of
the Commission's own 5G action plan, which aims to promote early deployment of
5G along major transport paths," 5GAA said.
(Reporting by Foo Yun Chee; additional reporting by Eric Auchard in London;
Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)
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