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Why Telefónica’s automation journey “will never end”

Juan Manuel Caro Bernat is Director of Operations Transformation at Telefónica. He talked to Annie Turner about the operator’s transformation journey.

Juan Manuel Caro Bernat is better known as Juanma, reports directly to Telefónica’s Global CTIO, Enrique Blanco, and lives and works in Madrid (pictured). At the time of this interview he was just short of his twentieth anniversary at Telefónica.

This article first appeared on FutureNet World and is reproduced with kind permission.

Caro Bernat is leading a transformation programme that began about six months ago and has an initial three-year horizon, but Caro Bernat humorously predicts it “will never end” – because the “end” goals will forever evolve.

The programme’s aim is to dramatically change the operator’s IT and network operating model, accelerating the adoption of the new ways of working needed to manage the future open and virtualised architecture and, ultimately, fulfil the promise of autonomous networks.

He says that “the network is changing in ways it has never been changed before”, and that these alterations are “happening very fast”. Indeed, on the day of our interview, Telefónica Deutschland/O2 announced it was the first network in Germany to have Open RAN live, at three pilot sites in Bavaria.

Ecosystem play
This is acting on the plan it announced in March 2020 – to create an ecosystem to advance the testing and industrialisation of Open RAN across its footprint. Its founding partners included Altiostar (in which it has invested), Gigatera Communications, Intel, Supermicro and Xilinx.

The RAN accounts for a big amount of the operator’s network CapEx, and the idea behind the Open RAN movement is to introduce greater competition into the market to stimulate innovation and reduced prices.

Hidden cost and complexity

Caro Bernat notes there is also a hidden “cost” associated with Open RAN in terms of more complex operations and an integration burden that must be tackled, but believes it definitely pays off.

Although there are already millions of customers using services running on virtualised networks in some countries, Caro Bernat stresses that, “You cannot operate an open and virtualised network using the same model of operations…we need to change the way we do things to get all the advantages of the new technologies: automation is mandatory, right across the access, transport and core networks to tackle the complexity and take advantage of the benefits of a programmable network”.

He continues, “The technology changes are both problem and an opportunity, and it will always keep changing,” which also means constant operational changes.

So where is Telefónica in its progress towards open, programmable and automated networks and IT? Caro Bernat comments, “We are working on very practical use cases…and with other operators to define how to fully automate and there is a long way to go to reach that ‘autonomous’ moon-shot”.

Short-term goals


The years 2020 and 2021 are the short term regarding the new Telefónica’s automation strategy, with two main areas of focus. The first is about putting the “enablers” in place, by which Caro Bernat means deploying open data platforms built on open-source software to get rid of the intractable problem of siloed data.

The data from those open platforms, as well as from infrastructure, and including orchestration data and AI, will be flowed into data lakes that are open source.

Automation will be built on top of this enabling layer, which Telefónica calls Fast OSS. It is complemented by UNICA Next, the group’s end-to-end virtualisation programme: for example, if Fast OSS needs to scale up a function in the evolved pack core as a serious overflow of traffic is predicted, capacity can be duplicated or halved, or whatever is necessary to maintain the right level of service, dynamically and without human intervention.

Caro Bernat says, “Fast OSS means we can put all the data from all over the network – all the VNFs, servers, orchestration, AI – in a common data lake. It is designed this way using open-source standards like [Apache] Kafka [the distributed event streaming platform] or Elasticsearch.”

Acclerating with Fast OSS

Fast OSS was developed by Telefónica to ingest, normalise and model data from multiple sources. Along with technology partner Everis, they were part of a team that ran a proof of concept Catalyst project at TM Forum, working with fellow champion American Tower Corporation, supported by Verbio, and Vlocity, a Salesforce company.

The idea is that this control can be applied to any network function using the UNICA Next architecture, taking it up to the service level – and even to the customer level– because everything below in the network is automated. The provider could even restart a site, as operators currently do from a network operation centre (NOC).

The Catalyst used the Forum’s Open Digital Architecture (ODA), which is an evolving framework for the type of open architecture Telefónica and many other network operators need to make fully automated infrastructure reality. In summer 2020, Telefónica committed to developing the ODA, along with fellow operators and some major vendors.

Enrique Blanco, CTIO, Telefónica Group, said at the time of the announcement, “The Open Digital Architecture is a true enabler to accelerate this digital transformation, allowing limitless scaling and multi-tenancy while remaining agnostic to the choice of underlying compute platform.

“This architecture paves the way to leverage cost-effectiveness, flexibility and scalability avoiding infrastructure lock-in while embracing true continuous integration and continuous deployment cycles.”

Data is the key


As Caro Bernat stresses, “Data is the key – you cannot automate without usable data,” which involves “introducing new processes, new tools and new skills into the teams – you must have operational transformation in parallel with technology advances”.

Hence the second strand of short-term activities is establishing new ways of working that can properly harness the enablers. This is all about breaking down organisational siloes, such as those of IT and Network.

The ethos at this end of the deal is “to streamline plan, build, operate” Caro Bernat explains, using DevOps and reskilling teams so that they can work in the planned programmable environment.


He acknowledges that shifting mindsets and making organisational changes is perhaps the greatest challenge of all, and technological change will not succeed without it. He said his company engaged the workforce in a lot of communication about the changes and why they are needed, while they are still working in the current ways in readiness.

He says, “It is important to create a common knowledge and understanding of what’s coming. If people are very involved, they are willing.”

He is insistent that it is essential to have new critical skills in-house, noting, “It might be in ten years’ time that we can buy automated network components out of the box, but at the moment we need to develop it ourselves because there is nothing out there on the market”.

The medium term


Moving to the medium term of 2022-2023, Caro Bernat says, “So the enablers and infrastructure will be in place, then we move to the automation mode and need to focus on simple use cases first and AI, then progress to more complex, cross-domain, use cases. As we gain experience and more data and platforms, we will push automation to the next level.

“We will change how we work in every process – our priorities will depend on what the market needs – for deploying, integrating, testing and operating. We will be upgrading the network constantly, and maintenance windows will disappear (or so they say!). This is because microservices will let us produce new versions of VNFs as we need them.”

“We will then have hundreds of VNFs running over virtualised infrastructures, and we will be updating every one of them on the fly, then test immediately. At the moment, the testing for bare dmetal equipment takes us weeks or months, so the processes must change dramatically.”

The second plank of this mid-term automation phase will be putting self-healing, self-provisioning and “and all the other self-things” to manage traffic automatically and to fix themselves if a problem arises. Caro Bernat notes that although these “words” have been around for a long time, it is only now, with all the other changes in tandem, that they are becoming “properly possible”.

The long term


He views 2024 and beyond as the long term, moving towards autonomous networks that can manage complex problems. He says this will be “scientific” R&D territory, for example progressing TM Forum’s ODA with other operators to ensure standardised approaches and interoperability of services, which will allow operators to deliver services beyond their own footprint.

The Forum’s suite of Open APIs is a critical element of the ODA, and Telefónica was a founding member of that initiative too, back in 2016.

He states, “We will see many new [vendor] entrants to the market like the Open RAN companies we mentioned earlier, but also companies like IBM and NEC from the IT side: sourcing will change in the ecosystem.”

He acknowledges that delivering services is another aspect of new ways of doing things and says this will change how telcos approach procurement, involving far more co-creation than ever there was in the past. It will also necessitate new business and partnership models, “changing the traditional way in which we interact with the ecosystem”.

Caro Bernat says, “We don’t know exactly what the future autonomous network is going to look like yet, but it is clear to me that openness and end to end virtualisation will be key characteristics. And on top of that, we need to define an automation architecture and hierarchy based in AI algorithms embedded in every layer and working together somehow. It sounds like a challenge!”

Citymesh wants to be Belgium’s fourth national mobile operator

The B2B wireless connectivity provider says it will apply for the spectrum package reserved for a fourth operator in the upcoming 5G auction.

Citymesh has announced its intention to compete in Belgium’s consumer market after being acquired by IT services provider Cegeka in December 2020.

The firm expressed confidence in being able to secure investment of about €100 million to become the country’s fourth national mobile network operator.

Belgium is lagging most of the rest of Europe regarding 5G spectrum auctions. It is now in a public consultation and the auction is not expected before early 2022.

Ambition to fruition

CEO Mitch De Geest said in a statement, “Citymesh has had the ambition for years to become the fourth telecom operator.

“We have found the final pieces of the puzzle; we have national 4G and 5G spectrum, a clear vision and, together with Cegeka, a strong and complete offering to shake up the telecoms market in Belgium.’

If it wins the full spectrum package, Citymesh would have access to 700MHz, 900MHz, 1400MHz, 1800MHz and 2000MHz spectrum, on top of its existing 2600MHz and 3500MHz spectrum.

It believes this would be sufficient to maintain its B2B focus and launch a highly competitive consumer offer.

“We have the great advantage of being able to build our networks from the ground up according to the latest standards,” added De Geest.

“Thanks to sufficient capacity in the 5G package, we can also use these state-of-the-art 5G networks to realise a unique offering on the consumer market”.

Competition to lower prices

The telecoms regulator, the Belgian Institute for Postal Services and Telecommunications (BIPT) recently updated a 2018 study which concluded a fourth national operator could reduce mobile data prices.

De Geest believes reserving the spectrum package for a new player “would not only be interesting in terms of mobile internet prices, but also in terms of employment and the development of Belgian talent”.

Liberty Global, Digital Colony to develop edge data centres in Europe

The two intend to form a joint venture (JV) called AtlasEdge to enable applications and services such as 5G, gaming, IoT and edge compute.

Liberty Global and Digital Colony’s new JV entity AtlasEdge is intended to serve the “growing European demand for scalable data center capacity that brings applications and content closer to the edge,” they said in a statement.

The JV is subject to securing the usual regulatory and merger approvals, but the partners hope to close the transaction in Q3.

Acting as enabler

AtlasEdge aims to serve the growing demand from cloud providers, streaming services and enterprises for high-performance, scalable and secure facilities through which they can distribute low-latency applications and services such as 5G, gaming, IoT and edge compute.

Liberty Global will contribute digital infrastructure assets, including its technical real estate portfolios, “at levels consistent with European digital infrastructure valuations, highlighting the strong underlying value embedded in its businesses”.

The company will also provide strategic and operational support to the business. Digital Colony will contribute operating expertise, strategic direction and capital. Josh Joshi will join and lead AtlasEdge’s Board of Directors as Executive Chairman.

Anchor tenancies

AtlasEdge will be supported by anchor tenancies from Liberty Global operating companies – Virgin Media in the UK and in Ireland, Sunrise-UPC in Switzerland and UPC in Poland. Liberty Global has just received final approval for Virgin Media to merge with Telefonica UK/O2.

Liberty Global said this will provide, “unprecedented local reach into consumers and businesses, will provide infrastructure services to third parties at the edge with a focus on performance, low-latency, scalability and quality of experience”.

Marc Ganzi, President and CEO of Colony Capital and CEO of Digital Colony, commented, “The proposed joint venture will unlock the growth potential of Liberty’s digital real estate holdings and capitalize on the emerging demand we are seeing for edge compute across Europe.

“It’s an opportunity for us to apply the entire Digital Colony value-add playbook, leveraging our operating expertise, strategic M&A capabilities, and access to institutional capital in partnership with a world-class organization like Liberty Global.

“I also know AtlasEdge will benefit from Josh Joshi’s insights and network across the digital infrastructure landscape.”

Liberty Global, Telefonica gain final approval for Virgin Media-O2 JV

The UK’s Competition & Markets Authority (CMA) gave its final approval for the 50:50 joint venture (JV) to go ahead.

The CMA cleared the transaction without remedies and said all regulatory conditions are met and in alignment with the original terms. The transaction is expected to close by June 1, 2021.

Virgin and O2 sell wholesale services to mobile operators in the UK. Virgin supplies leased lines to mobile operators and O2’s network supports a number of MVNOs including Tesco – run by one of the biggest supermarket chains – which the biggest in the UK.

Competitive concerns

Liberty Global and Telefonica proposed the joint venture in May 2020, to merge Virgin Media’s broadband network, and the mobile operator O2.

Oversight of possible competitive issues passed to the CMA from the European Commission after Brexit.

The CMA was concerned that after the merger, Virgin and O2 could raise prices or reduce the quality of these wholesale services, or withdraw them altogether, thereby affecting the others’ quality of service or putting prices up which would be passed on to consumers.

This could make Virgin and O2’s own mobile service more attractive to retail customers, but would ultimately lead to a worse deal overall for UK consumers. Clearly the CMA has satisfied itself about these concerns withouth imposing any remedies.

Plans for the future

A statement from Telefonica at the time said the JV will invest £10 billion in the UK over the next five years and deliver “substantial synergies” of £6.2 billion after integration costs – equivalent to cost, CapEx and revenue benefits of £540 million on an annual basis by the fifth full year after closing the deal.

Virgin Media plans to bring gigabit speeds to more than 15 million homes across its UK network by the end of 2021.

The UK was identified as one of Telefonica’s four principal markets along with Spain, Germany and Brazil in its five-point strategic plan launched in November 2019.

The JV is expected to deliver synergies worth £6.2 billion (€7.19 billion) on a net present value basis after integration costs. The partners reckon they will create a nationwide integrated communications provider with £11 billion in annual revenue.

Senior appointments

Last month the partners appointment of Lutz Schüler as CEO and Patricia Cobian as Chief Financial Officer. Schüler is currently CEO of Virgin Media and Cobian is CFO at O2. Jeanie York will become the JV’s CTO, she is currently CTO at Virgin Media.

Brendan O’Reilly was CTO at O2, but left the company in January to become Global CTO at infrastructure provider BAI Communications.

Mike Fries, CEO of Liberty Global group, and José María Alvarez-Pallete, CEO of Telefonica group, commented: “This is a watershed moment in the history of telecommunications in the UK as we are now cleared to bring real choice where it hasn’t existed before, while investing in fibre and 5G that the UK needs to thrive.

“We thank the CMA for conducting a thorough and efficient review. Lutz and Patricia are now set to take the reins and launch a national connectivity champion that will connect more people, ignite more businesses back to growth and power more communities for the greater good.”

Deutsche Telekom aims to grow core profits by 3 to 5% pa up to 2024

It expects annual revenue increases of 1 to 2% in the mid-term targets announced ahead of its two-day investor presentation.

As Deutsche Telekom (DT) readied itself for the investor event, CEO Tim Hoettges told Reuters, “We step up our efforts…We want to outperform the strong development of the last few years and lead the Group into the future with sustainable growth.”

By 2030, it intends to extend fibre coverage to 60% of Germans, up from 5% now, and 5G mobile network is expected to cover 97% of the population by that time.

Dow Jones reports that he said DT plans to increase its stake in its T-Mobile in the US to more than 50%. DT owns 43% of T-Mobile US which it controls through a shareholder agreement with SoftBank Group.

Hoettges said the company has a roadmap to increase its stake to 51% by 2024.

In a statement the company said, “The group regularly assesses its investments for possibilities to further increase their value – currently with a focus on T-Mobile Netherlands and the tower portfolio. In both cases, without preconceived views as to an outcome and with no time pressure”.

This is cheering news in a year that IDC predicts 0.7% rise in revenue globally for telecoms services, but as the analyst house observes, it is still not the jump that so many expected 5G to deliver.

 

O2 partners Microsoft to develop MEC in private 5G network

The proof of concept (PoC) will concentrate on low latency and secure, on-premises data management. O2 is also buffing up its green credentials.

O2 (Telefónica UK) has a new partnership with Microsoft to work on a PoC for on-premise mobile edge computing (MEC) capabilities within a private 5G network.

The operator will provide the secure private 5G network plus Industry 4.0 applications while Microsoft Azure Private Edge Zones will deliver the computing service. O2 will also collaborate with Microsoft for Startups to build an ecosystem for the development of new 5G solutions.

O2 recently launched a private 5G network initiative with Leonardo, a global high technology company in the Aerospace, Defence & Security sector. The trial with Microsoft is similar, apart from the MEC element.

Jo Bertram, MD of Business at O2, said, “This particular trial with the Microsoft Azure platform will provide secure and superfast capabilities that will maximise productivity and efficiency, as well as peace of mind.”

Yousef Khalidi, corporate vice president, Azure for Operators at Microsoft, said: “Combining Azure technology with O2 services is critical to bringing MEC to the enterprise edge, and we look forward to seeing customers leverage this platform to drive innovation across a broad range of information and operational technology applications.”

Separately…

Earlier in the week O2 UK announced O2 it is rolling out smart cooling technology to better control the temperature at its data centres and boost the efficiency of its network. The plan is to save the equivalent of 1 million kilograms of CO2 year on year.
 
In the last 12 months O2 carried record levels of data – up 89% from the pre-pandemic average in 2019.

It expects the appetite for mobile data will continue to grow (with the O2 network carrying an average 55% more peak hour data throughput in the first week of May than it did in the same week in 2020) – heating up equipment in data centres.
 
The new cooling equipment uses cold air from outside instead of relying on electric air conditioning. This also reduces O2’s reliance on pollutant refrigerant gases.

Energy optimisation

O2 says it is the first major mobile network operator to roll out new management software from EkkoSense across its entire estate. The software uses sensors to monitor exactly how much cooling each site needs at any one time, and report back on how to optimise cooling as demand changes.  

O2 has already upgraded around 70% of its core network sites with the new equipment and EkkoSense optimisation software, saving between 15% and 20% of energy per site – equivalent to 678,000 kg of CO2 in its first pro-rata year of use.

Qualcomm strives to drive 5G adoption via more devices

The chip maker has announced the “world’s first” 10GB M.2 reference design to embed in devices.

Qualcomm describes it new range of 5G cards as plug and play. They are based on new Snapdragon X65 and X62 5G M.2 Reference Designs and intended for use in devices from PCs and laptops to customer premises equipment (CPE) such as routers, tablets, and gaming and extended reality equipment.

The company says the new reference designs use “the world’s most advanced and first 3GPP Release 16 5G modem-RF solutions supporting unmatched spectrum aggregation, global 5G sub-6 and extended-range mmWave, and high power-efficiency”.

Attempts to embed 4G connectivity in devices never really took off, despite initial high hopes for its ubiquity, it was generally too expensive to use and too difficult to embed.

Why does Qualcomm think it’s going to crack it with 5G?

Making is easy

Durga Malladi, SVP and GM, 4G/5G, Qualcomm Technologies, noted the global boom in data consumption and added, “To help meet this data demand and create exciting new products and experiences, our new 5G M.2 Reference Designs tackle many 5G design complexities upfront so that OEMs don’t have to.

“Qualcomm Technologies is committed to leading the acceleration and expansion of 5G beyond smartphones.

“We’ve built world-class engineering and customer service teams dedicated to 5G mobile broadband to equip customers with advanced reference designs.
 
We are empowering the ecosystem to bring next generation Release 16 5G products as early as late 2021 and helping create new business opportunities across computing, CPEs, XR, gaming, industrial IoT and beyond.”

The Snapdragon X65 and X62 5G M.2 Reference Designs are available to OEMs now.

Vodafone looking to grow and cut costs through investment

The rise in its annual operating profit suggests the group’s long-term positioning and strategy is starting to pay off.

The most obviouis and bad news was that Vodafone’s annual sales were down 2.6% to €43.8 billion due to the loss of roaming revenues and being on the wrong end of exchange rate changes.

Service revenues for the year fell 1.9% to €37.1 billion.

Better news

The much better news and arguably more important news is that its operating profit rose by more than 24% to €5.1 billion.

Vodafone Group’s CEO, Nick Read (pictured), stressed that continuing heavy capital investment in networks is a key plank of its strategy, along with accelerating the development of digital capabilities, and the cash flow generated by more efficient operations was the key to being able to invest – and pay dividends.

He stated, “We have delivered on the first phase of our strategy to reshape Vodafone as a stronger connectivity provider – including the simplification of the group to Europe and Africa, the successful IPO of Vantage Towers (€13.2 billion market capitalisation), the fast roll out of our next generation mobile and fixed networks, share gain in broadband subscriptions and continued reduction in customer churn”.

Despite paying off some debt, it still stands at €40.5 billion.

Critical connectivity

Read said digital transformation efforts had contributed savings of €0.5 billion over the year while the integration of assets acquired from Liberty Global is ahead of schedule. He continued, “The world has changed. The pandemic has shown how critical connectivity and digital services are to society.

“Vodafone is strongly positioned and through increased investment, we are taking action now to ensure we play a leadership role and capture the opportunities that these changes create.”

In a long and detailed statement, Vodafone said that its growth strategy requires “a greater level of investment” in these four areas:
1.    We will continue to invest in leading gigabit networks by upgrading our fixed networks and rolling out 5G ‘built right’. To help fund this, our new Technology operating model will drive a higher level of efficiency in unitary spend, while greater standardisation will eliminate duplication.
2.    We will have a stronger, more comprehensive product offering in every market, particularly in Vodafone Business, to accelerate our revenue and profit growth.
3.    We will accelerate our digital capabilities, which will ultimately help us sustain margin expansion, strengthen our direct channels and build further differentiation in our customer offer.
4.    We are retaining the flexibility to support Vantage Towers in realising its own growth ambitions, particularly in the high incremental returns opportunities of new build-to-suit sites and ground-lease buyouts.

Vodafone’s presentation and can be found here.

Three Ireland first to join Ericsson’s global Startup 5G programme

Meanwhile, Three UK reports on progress of its £2+ billion transformation of the network and IT.

Ericsson has launched Startup 5G, a programme designed to help CSPs capture the consumer potential of 5G – and Three Ireland is the first to join this global initiative.

Startup 5G is designed to introduce operators to suitable partners for the consumer sector and help them develop go-to-market strategies to grab their share of the estimated global $3.7 trillion (€3.03 trillion) opportunity.

Tech looking for a use?

Three Ireland will be able to tap Ericsson’s ConsumerLab research and analytical data, as well as gaining exclusive access to a worldwide network of 5G startups.

They will work together on 5G consumer offers like augmented and virtual realities, digital education, e-sports and other immersive media experiences.

Elaine Carey, Chief Commercial Officer (CCO), Three Ireland and UK, says: “The collaboration and partnership with Ericsson in our 5G consumer offerings has been established, grown and developed over the last two years, and has now reached a new level as we join their Startup 5G program.

“Three Ireland will now be in a fantastic position to introduce exciting new partners and offerings to customers in the Irish market, demonstrating our commitment to 5G innovation, and our customers.”

Read the Ericsson ConsumerLab: Five Ways to a Better 5G report here.

Meanwhile, over in the UK…

Three UK is spending more than £2 billion (€2.33 billion) on its network and IT infrastructure, increasing 4G speeds by up to 150% as well as delivering what it claims is the UK’s fastest 5G network with 1300 5G sites live.
 
Some 3,500 4G/5G sites have been upgraded to 10Gbps capable transmission, and is enhancing 4G by adding 1400MHz to over 1900 sites, which will increase download speeds by up to three times, but for the moment, the speed is doubled.

Three UK also reiterates that the two 10MHz blocks of low frequency spectrum it won at the spectrum auction triples its holding of low frequency spectrum which “will have a transformative effect on its customers’ experience indoors and in rural areas”.

Also, Hrvoje Jerkovic recently joined Three UK as its Core Network Director. Previously he has worked for A1 Telekom Austria and T-Mobile where he was responsible for the core network and quality assurance domains.

New anti-spam filter

To address the growing number of smishing issues faced by customers, Three UK introduced a new anti-spam filter at the end of last year to protect customers by blocking spam and fraudulent SMS.
 
It has reduced reports attempted fraud to Three’s Spam Reporting Service by 90% in the last few months. Three UK is continuing to build, test and implement its own filtering rules to keep up with the latest fraud trends.
 

Sweden’s Net4Mobility signs 5 year 5G contract with Nokia

The joint venture between Tele2 and Telenor is deploying Nokia’s AirScale portfolio for commercial roll-out.

Nokia is to deploy its equipment to support commercial 5G services across “significant” areas of Sweden in a five-year deal. 

It will supply kit from its AirScale portfolio to deliver 5G to businesses and consumers, to enable use cases across Industry 4.0, entertainment, cloud gaming, transportation, education, and healthcare.

Replacing 4G

The intention is to improve 4G performance while increasing capacity with 5G services introduced at most sites within awarded areas.

Net4Mobility will also use the 3.5 GHz spectrum band for dense urban coverage and it is expected that a significant number of new sites will be added every year.

Net4Mobility is replacing Huawei equipment which provided its its 4G network, switching to Ericsson and Nokia, after the Swedish regulator, PTS, decided Chinese vendors should be banned from Sweden’s communications infrastructure on security grounds.

There are fears the likes of Huawei and ZTE could be obliged to use their equipment to spy for the Chinese state, which they deny.

Huawei has taken the regulator to court and China has threatened Sweden, and its flagship telecoms equipment provider, Ericsson, with retribution if the decision in not reversed.

The final court ruling is expected soon.

Adding to the core

Net4Mobility, which was formed in 2009 to support the deployment of 2G and 4G networks, is Sweden’s largest RAN and carries about 60% of the country’s network traffic.

Its 4G network covers 90% of the country and 99.9% of the population.

The collaboration will continue with the development of a 5G network. Nokia has already been selected by Tele2 and Telenor for the cloud core network.
 
Nokia will supply AirScale Base Stations, AirScale massive MIMO Adaptive Antenna solutions, and other RAN solutions and tools to drive operational efficiency. 

The company will also provide professional services, including integration, implementation, and network optimisation services, and technical support for operations and maintenance.

5G all over the country

Jonas Edén, CTO of Telenor Sweden, said: “We continue to expand our 5G offer to our subscribers in Sweden. 5G is already available in our biggest cities and we aim to offer the service to 99.9% of Sweden’s population by the end of 2023.”
 
Yogesh Malik, CTIO of Tele2, commented: “I am very pleased that we can now begin the broad rollout of 5G in Sweden. The new generation network will mean a significant improvement for consumers and enable innovation, automation, and higher efficiency for companies.”
 
Tommi Uitto, President of Mobile Networks at Nokia, said, “This deal demonstrates Nokia’s continued momentum for both radio and 5G across Scandinavia and the Baltic region.”

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