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We can meet 5G security needs, says Ericsson India MD
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SME Times News Bureau | 27 Jul, 2020
As India increases the scrutiny of Chinese companies and their products
over the national security concerns, a top executive of Swedish gear
maker Ericsson said on Monday that it has a process in place to meet the
security, privacy and regulatory requirements of its customers for the
5G era in the country.
The auction of 5G spectrum in India was
earlier expected to be held in April, but the Covid-19 pandemic has
pushed back the deadline.
Late last year, the government decided
that it will give 5G spectrum for trials to all vendors and operators
who applied, including Huawei and ZTE.
However, India's border
tensions with China has renewed calls for barring Huawei and ZTE from
bidding for India's 5G network by certain groups in India, including the
Confederation of All India Traders (CAIT).
Earlier this month, the traders' body even sent a letter to Union IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad in this regard.
Asked
if an increased scrutiny of Chinese companies will give the company
some extra mileage in terms of capturing the 5G market, Ericsson India's
Managing Director Nitin Bansal said the company focuses on providing
competitive solutions making its customers win in the market.
"We
do not base our business plans on things which we cannot control. We
believe our promise to the customer is based on our technology
leadership. As is evident globally, we have been winning business and
customers based on our technology capabilities and leadership," Bansal
told IANS in an interview.
Ericsson said it has close to 100
commercial 5G agreements or contracts globally with unique service
providers, of which 54 are live networks.
"Pioneering customers
select us as their 5G partner and we were first with commercial live
networks in four continents. This includes multiple service providers in
the United States, South Korea, Europe as well as in Australia and
Middle East," Bansal said.
In India, Ericsson has been working
with operator partners as well as the academia community to test and
develop various 5G use cases which are relevant for the country.
The
Swedish gear maker last year announced that it was selected by Vodafone
Idea Limited to deploy 5G-ready equipment across select markets in
India.
Later in that year, Ericsson announced a memorandum of
understanding with Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) to work together
on developing new 5G use cases, knowledge sharing on 5G technology
concepts, industry and innovation trends including 3GPP standardisation
progress.
Amid calls for barring Chinese companies from 5G in
India, there has also been a concern that even non-Chinese companies may
use Chinese equipment in 5G network given the nature of global supply
chain, thereby rendering such a possible ban ultimately meaningless.
Ericsson
said that the telecom equipment that the company supplies to Indian
telcos is made in India and it is also exporting 5G radios to other
markets from its facility in Pune.
"We manufacture telecom equipment, including 4G, 5G radios and microwave products at our Pune facility," Bansal noted.
"We
have processes in place to ensure the development, production, shipping
and deployment of our products, solutions and services to meet the
security, privacy and regulatory requirements of our customers," he
said.
Ericsson said it has a global software development
strategy, with engineers working with software for new products,
including 4G and 5G radios and baseband, on several sites across the
globe.
"All Ericsson's software is verified, signed and
distributed centrally from Sweden, and, when so required, under Swedish
export licenses. In all our manufacturing and software development
facilities globally, Ericsson ensures that strict security controls are
in place," Bansal mentioned.
"In addition, we undertake close
quality controls, tests and verifications to ensure compliance to our
security standards and overall specification of our network solutions,"
he added.
A recent Ericsson Consumer Lab survey done amid the
Covid-19 crisis has shown that 62 per cent of consumers in India wished
5G had been rolled out much faster to help them deal with the current
crisis.
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