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    Home » Sections » Telecoms » Huawei shows how sub-3GHz 5G will unleash Africa’s digital potential  

    Huawei shows how sub-3GHz 5G will unleash Africa’s digital potential  

    Promoted | Huawei has used MWC Kigali to underline how important sub-3.5GHz 5G is in unleashing Africa’s digital potential.
    By Huawei19 October 2023
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    Rwandan President Paul Kagame

    At Mobile World Congress (MWC) Kigali, currently underway in the Rwandan capital, Huawei underlined how important 5G, and sub-3GHz 5G in particular, in delivering Africa’s immense digital potential.

    The congress, which is Africa’s most influential connectivity event, brings together regulators, operators and spectrum industry leaders from all over Africa. Opening the congress, Rwandan President Paul Kagame gave an overview of some of the continent’s biggest connectivity challenges and opportunities.

    “Too many Africans remain offline,” the Rwandan president told the more than 2 500 delegates in attendance. “Today, Africa has the fastest-growing mobile penetration rate globally. But we still have a long way to go. Yet, we already have the means to address the problems we are dealing with today.

    “The pandemic has added to accelerating the transition to a new era of technology-led development. Our young and talented entrepreneurs are driving this change, and we continue to support them,” he added. “That means we have to address the gaps in access and connectivity with a sense of urgency.”

    Li Tao, president of Huawei Southern Africa’s wireless business

    During the 5G summit portion of the conference, Li Tao, Huawei Southern Africa wireless business president, explained how sub-3GHz 5G can help address some of those challenges.

    Image: Huawei

    “We experienced strong growth in the demand to improve the last-mile broadband infrastructure to bridge the digital divide between urban and rural areas,” he said. “We believe that the full utilisation of the sub 3GHz spectrum will be the best way to enable 5G and narrow the huge demand gap in 4G.”

    To further enable Africa’s digital transformation, Tao called for more favourable industry spectrum policies to make use of the sub-3GHz band.

    Image: Huawei

    According to Tao, many industry players believe that sub-3GHz can generate the maximised spectrum value. That’s because it can enhance 4G capacity and stimulate traffic by one-band dual usage.

    Additionally, it can accelerate the evolution to 5G. Sub-3GHz and also continue to increase the earnings potential of legacy 4G networks, while meeting the needs of 5G.

    Tao added that 4G revenue growth will also support the continuous deployment of 5G in Africa. This is something that many of the world’s top operators, including the likes of China Mobile, MTN and Vodacom, have seen first-hand through their adoption of 2.6/2.3GHz dual-network deployment.

    Image: Huawei

    Sub-3GHz 5G bands key to unlocking Africa’s potential?

    The mobile industry believes that low-frequency 700MHz and 2.3/2.6GHz are the most critical to unlocking Africa’s digital potential. While 82 countries around the world have adopted the former, just six African countries have done so. At the same time, 68% of TDD 2.6/2.3GHz spectrum on the African continent is still unallocated. These three bands also have a very good global ecosystem. In addition, some countries still have FDD spectrum that has not been fully distributed, and these have the ability to further stimulate 4G traffic.

    Reviewing each band of sub-3GHz, 700MHz is one of the most important bands for coverage, as it supports the low-band 4X4 MIMO technology which enables deeper and wider coverage.

    Compared with the traditional 800MHz, indoor and outdoor edge coverage has increased 100%

    Compared with the traditional 800MHz, indoor and outdoor edge coverage has increased 100% and the capacity has increased 40-60%. Tests in Southern Africa show that the 4G availability ratio increased from 75% to 91%, and the edge rate increased by 163%. This illustrates that 700MHz has great advantages as a 4G/5G fundamental network.

    Secondly, TDD 2.3/2.6GHz has the most potential as a spectrum resource to improve the level of mobile broadband. It has good coverage, large bandwidth and smooth evolution capability. It is very suitable for MBB experience enhancement and home broadband: TDD 2.3/2.6GHz has 5-6dB better coverage than 3.5GHz. It enables a 35% reduction in investment by the mobile operator, and, over time can release three to five times suppressed traffic in high-load scenarios through dual-use on one network. At the same time, the best ecosystem of 4G TDD ensures efficient use of spectrum.

    As an example of how successful such an approach can be, Tao pointed to the successful case of South Africa using 4G fixed wireless access (FWA) to significantly improve home broadband coverage with 2.3/2.6GHz FWA users.

    He added that mobile network operators in the region have other reasons for putting their weight behind the sub-3GHz spectrum, too. Among them is the fact that it can consolidate fundamental networks such as mobile broadband, wireless home broadband and IoT, to maximise social and economic value in a universal and efficient manner and pave the way for future 5G deployment. As 5G is deployed more widely, it will bring new applications for consumers, businesses and government, to improve the lives of ordinary Africans and promote inclusive social and economic development.

    Discussion and practice-sharing during the panel session

    Some highlight 5G spectrum strategies were expressed by experts and partners  after the panel discussion:

    • Full allocation of FDD (frequency division duplex) sub-3GHz (especially 700MHz) for affordable and universal mobile broadband towards closing the digital gap and fuelling Africa’s digital future.
    • Full utilization of 2.3/2.6GHz TDD bands for further mobile broadband improvement.
    • Overall development of 4G/5G FWA in order to uplift overall national broadband penetration rates.
    • Tax incentives and rebates, affordability considerations for both devices and services, digital literacy for rural and underserved areas.

    This promoted content was paid for by the party concerned

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