Amazon breaks into Europe 5G networks with Telefonica cloud deal
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[May 08, 2024] By
Supantha Mukherjee
STOCKHOLM (Reuters) -Telefonica Germany will move one million 5G
customers to Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud later this month, company
executives told Reuters, in a bold move by the U.S. online retailer to
break into the global telecoms market.
While some telecom networks have moved IT and other non-core operations
to the public cloud, the move by the subsidiary of Spanish group
Telefonica is a global first where an existing mobile operator is
switching its core network to a public cloud.
Big cloud-computing services firms such as Amazon and Microsoft have
been trying to move more into the telecoms sector, lured by billions of
dollars in potential revenue, but operators have been wary of the
capability of public clouds in handling a mobile network.
"I want to see it working for at least one to two quarters and have a
roadmap to move at least 30-40% of my customer base by 2025-2026," said
Mallik Rao, Chief Technology & Information Officer at O2 Telefonica,
also known as Telefonica Germany.
The company has 45 million customers in Germany.
AWS and O2 Telefonica did not disclose financial details of the deal.
The core network, which consists of high-performance servers in data
centers, is the heart of a mobile network that securely routes data and
calls at high speeds. A public cloud will cut costs, increase scale and
allow repairs to be done without service disruption.
"As the network becomes more defined by software, traditional players
need to up the ante to keep up with the threat of the big tech," said
analyst Paolo Pescatore at PP Foresight. "We will hear the word 'frenemy'
used a lot more."
U.S.-based Dish, which built its mobile network from scratch, became in
2021 the only telecom company to use AWS cloud for its core network.
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An Amazon Web Services (AWS) logo is pictured during a trade fair in
Hannover Messe, in Hanover, Germany, April 22, 2024. REUTERS/Annegret
Hilse/File Photo
"Dish was much easier because they had no existing systems that had
to be modified to work with the cloud," AWS vice president Jan
Hofmeyr said in an interview.
Nokia, which also worked with Dish, will provide the software and
AWS will provide its infrastructure for Telefonica Germany.
"The cloud players continue to get better ... and building more
credibility with the operators to be able to move network functions
into the cloud," said Raghav Sahgal, president of cloud and network
services at Nokia.
Telefonica first worked with AWS and Ericsson, and then swapped to
Nokia and AWS, Rao said. "The days of trial are over. I don't want
to keep on trying."
The global telecom cloud market is expected to reach $108.7 billion
by 2030 from $19.7 billion in 2021, making it a growth driver for
companies such as Amazon.
"We want to make it a business to run telco workloads," AWS' Hofmeyr
said, adding that the company expects more deals with other
operators in the next 12 months.
"I would say in most cases the discussion is about timing versus
should we move into the cloud."
(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Stockholm, Editing by Kenneth
Li, Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Mark Potter)
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