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Huawei loses main Singapore 5G networks to Ericsson, Nokia

glockman

Old Fart
Asset
Oh-oh, big daddy Xi is not going to be happy :biggrin:


Bloomberg
25 June 2020


A woman and a child walk out of the Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel) building in Singapore on February 12, 2016. Singtel reported a 1.7 per cent fall in third-quarter net profit of 683 million US dollar for the three months ended December, compared with 694 million US dollar a year ago, as adverse currency movements and investments offset growing mobile data usage by its customers. AFP PHOTO / ROSLAN RAHMAN (Photo by Roslan RAHMAN / AFP) (Photo by ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Singapore Telecommunications selected Ericsson “to commence a period of negotiation to provide the 5G SA Core, RAN and mmWave network. (FILE PHOTO: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

By Abhishek Vishnoi and Yoojung Lee

(Bloomberg) -- Singapore’s biggest telecom operators chose Ericsson AB and Nokia Oyj as their main 5G network providers, leaving China’s Huawei Technologies Co. with less significant contracts in the city state.

Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. chose Ericsson while a group that includes StarHub Ltd. opted for Nokia after the city-state gave final approval for the rollout of nationwide 5G coverage in the country Wednesday. Huawei, which has been a point of contention in the tensions between the U.S. and China, still has a foothold in the market as a provider for TPG Telecom Pte’s smaller, local network system.

The final awards were issued to Singtel and a group formed by StarHub and M1 Ltd. after they completed regulatory processes, including selection of preferred frequency spectrum lots and vendor partners, the Infocomm Media Development Authority said Wednesday. Provisional awards were made in April.

TPG Telecom Pte Ltd. is being allocated the remaining frequency spectrum in the millimeter wave band to roll out localised 5G networks, the authority said.

“We never explicitly excluded any vendor,” Minister for Communications and Information S. Iswaran said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin on Thursday. “You have a diversity of vendors involved in different aspects of the 5G system and that is in fact a positive outcome from our perspective,” he said.

Ericsson, Nokia
Iswaran said Thursday the city-state has very clear security and resilience requirements, and the choices made by the telcos took this into account “very clearly”.

Singtel, the country’s largest telco operator, said Wednesday it selected Ericsson “to commence a period of negotiation to provide the 5G SA Core, RAN and mmWave network, with a view to finalising the contractual terms as soon as practicable.”

StarHub, which received spectrum rights jointly with M1, said the preferred 5G technology partner, subject to final contract, is Nokia for the 5G radio access network. Nokia is also the preferred technology supplier for StarHub’s 5G core and mmWave networks. The Singapore company is exploring other network elements with Nokia, Huawei Technologies Co., and ZTE Corp., it said.

TPG Telecom said it’s an active member of the Telecom Infra Project and “will leverage the extensive OpenRAN vendor community along with Huawei’s advanced network equipment” for the implementation of 5G services.

Singapore’s 5G Network
Singtel and the StarHub-M1 group plan to introduce a standalone 5G network starting from January 2021. The country aims to have 5G coverage for at least half of the nation by the end of 2022 and the entire island by 2025. The plan sets up Singapore to join countries in the region such as China and South Korea, which have begun to offer commercial 5G services.

The rollout is coming at a time when measures to curb the coronavirus have forced people around the world to stay and work from home, testing digital services and connectivity like never before. The technology is crucial for applications from autonomous driving to remote surgery. The announcement is also just a day after general elections were declared for July 10.

US, China
The Singapore telcos’ decision on providers comes amid worsening tensions between the U.S. and China. The U.S. administration has banned Huawei from its market for telecom equipment, as part of an effort to curb its presence in 5G networks globally.

The Pentagon, in letters to lawmakers dated June 24, said it put Huawei on a list of 20 companies it says are owned or controlled by China’s military. While the move’s implications were not immediately clear, it opens the company to potential additional U.S. sanctions.

Singapore has close economic and political ties with the U.S. and China, and last year indicated it would let its telco companies decide for themselves on suppliers. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said earlier this year it hadn’t banned Huawei, but would evaluate it based on operational requirements.

https://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/h...5-g-networks-to-ericsson-nokia-015519859.html
 

eatshitndie

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
must be a bunch of ah neh evaluators in the panel. many telcos outside prc are staffed by ah neh execs and engineers. with the situation at the indo-prc border, can bet that over 69% of telcos in the world will avoid huawei, zte, or any prc supplier with a 69m pole. prc will have to resort to sexporting more wuhan whores.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Get rid of CAQ Pinky this GE. Put his younger bro to kick his arse.

You think that changes anything? Huawei 'tio marked' all over the world now, and TSMC and Samsung have refused to make (Kirin) chips for Huawei.

FYI, chips are not just for smartphones... all your telco equipment and missiles also require chips.

Have fun becoming an isolated pariah state. :cool:
 

Peiweh

Alfrescian
Loyal
Get rid of CAQ Pinky this GE. Put his younger bro to kick his arse.
Comrade Tan, what we need to do is get rid of the Communists. You see you lot a dangerous bunch. You deal drugs, you start wars, you eat dogs and cats and you lie all the time. Oh and you just let loose a virus that has fucked the whole world. We all hate you. 5 billion people on this Earth now hate you. You see why, though dont you?

o-CHINA-HOUSE-OF-CARDS-570.jpg
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
must be a bunch of ah neh evaluators in the panel. many telcos outside prc are staffed by ah neh execs and engineers. with the situation at the indo-prc border, can bet that over 69% of telcos in the world will avoid huawei, zte, or any prc supplier with a 69m pole. prc will have to resort to sexporting more wuhan whores.
A choice between ah nehs and ah tiongs? It's like choosing between the devil n the deep blue sea
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
A choice between ah nehs and ah tiongs? It's like choosing between the devil n the deep blue sea
Ang mohs have decided. Indians are top notch. Anything but chinese except when it comes to bonking.

Newly appointed CEO of Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis AG Vas Narasimhan.
Newly appointed CEO of Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis AG Vas Narasimhan.(Reuters)

Novartis CEO Joe Jimenez will step down on February 1 and hand over to drug development chief Vas Narasimhan to decide the fate of $50 billion in assets and make good on a pledge to return the Swiss company to sales growth.
Jimenez, who will have been at the helm for eight years when he retires, has hived off animal health, vaccines and over-the-counter drugs businesses at Novartis to focus on generally more profitable prescription medicines, particularly in cancer.
But sales have been hit as top-selling drugs such as blood cancer treatment Gleevec have lost patent protection, while eye business Alcon has lagged expectations and generics arm Sandoz has faced intense pressure on prices in the United States.
 

congo9

Alfrescian
Loyal
You think that changes anything? Huawei 'tio marked' all over the world now, and TSMC and Samsung have refused to make (Kirin) chips for Huawei.

FYI, chips are not just for smartphones... all your telco equipment and missiles also require chips.

Have fun becoming an isolated pariah state. :cool:
I am sure China can build their own chip and also build their own plant.

Last 3 years, Micron Singapore has been asked to set up a new factory in China or Singapore. In the end Micron chose Singapore to set up another plant (Which is side by side the existing plant in Woodlands).

China will wise up and get their act together. These common PRCs can work in food factory or sweat shop. But they can't work in sensitive areas like in chip plant. They are prone to stealing technology for their own selfishness gain.

Deviate a bit, now with conflict with India. The publishing of Death toll suffered by Indian army further fuel the Nationalism the Indian in and out India continent. Surely the way China handle the conflict and the way they offended many Nation had come full circle. Now they angered the Neh. Neh has been very peaceful and non threatening to other Nation.
 

Byebye Penis

Alfrescian
Loyal
Singtel is a staunch supporter of ZTE.
ZTE equipments are used for important clients of Singtel and ZTE cooperates with HW for network infrastructure.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I am sure China can build their own chip and also build their own plant.

Last 3 years, Micron Singapore has been asked to set up a new factory in China or Singapore. In the end Micron chose Singapore to set up another plant (Which is side by side the existing plant in Woodlands).

China will wise up and get their act together. These common PRCs can work in food factory or sweat shop. But they can't work in sensitive areas like in chip plant. They are prone to stealing technology for their own selfishness gain.

Deviate a bit, now with conflict with India. The publishing of Death toll suffered by Indian army further fuel the Nationalism the Indian in and out India continent. Surely the way China handle the conflict and the way they offended many Nation had come full circle. Now they angered the Neh. Neh has been very peaceful and non threatening to other Nation.

That will take many years. The world would have already moved on by then.

Anyway Huawei is linked to the PLA, no one should feel sorry for it.

There will be no 'wising up' without regime change. A leopard does not change its spots.
 

knnb40

Alfrescian
Loyal
not sure if as a business one should look for material supplier not engaged in Trade wall.
recently I go online to purchase a meanwell driver from a US online shop.
after submit and pay via credit card, the customer service request me to declare the final user of my purchase.
??? ah.....meanwell driver....consider weapon grade component ?
like that if I but a small piece of glass, this glass might stick onto a missile optical window ?
 

birdie69

Alfrescian
Loyal
Oh-oh, big daddy Xi is not going to be happy :biggrin:


Bloomberg
25 June 2020


A woman and a child walk out of the Singapore Telecommunications (Singtel) building in Singapore on February 12, 2016. Singtel reported a 1.7 per cent fall in third-quarter net profit of 683 million US dollar for the three months ended December, compared with 694 million US dollar a year ago, as adverse currency movements and investments offset growing mobile data usage by its customers. AFP PHOTO / ROSLAN RAHMAN (Photo by Roslan RAHMAN / AFP) (Photo by ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Singapore Telecommunications selected Ericsson “to commence a period of negotiation to provide the 5G SA Core, RAN and mmWave network. (FILE PHOTO: ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP via Getty Images)

By Abhishek Vishnoi and Yoojung Lee

(Bloomberg) -- Singapore’s biggest telecom operators chose Ericsson AB and Nokia Oyj as their main 5G network providers, leaving China’s Huawei Technologies Co. with less significant contracts in the city state.

Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. chose Ericsson while a group that includes StarHub Ltd. opted for Nokia after the city-state gave final approval for the rollout of nationwide 5G coverage in the country Wednesday. Huawei, which has been a point of contention in the tensions between the U.S. and China, still has a foothold in the market as a provider for TPG Telecom Pte’s smaller, local network system.

The final awards were issued to Singtel and a group formed by StarHub and M1 Ltd. after they completed regulatory processes, including selection of preferred frequency spectrum lots and vendor partners, the Infocomm Media Development Authority said Wednesday. Provisional awards were made in April.

TPG Telecom Pte Ltd. is being allocated the remaining frequency spectrum in the millimeter wave band to roll out localised 5G networks, the authority said.

“We never explicitly excluded any vendor,” Minister for Communications and Information S. Iswaran said in an interview with Bloomberg Television’s Haslinda Amin on Thursday. “You have a diversity of vendors involved in different aspects of the 5G system and that is in fact a positive outcome from our perspective,” he said.

Ericsson, Nokia
Iswaran said Thursday the city-state has very clear security and resilience requirements, and the choices made by the telcos took this into account “very clearly”.

Singtel, the country’s largest telco operator, said Wednesday it selected Ericsson “to commence a period of negotiation to provide the 5G SA Core, RAN and mmWave network, with a view to finalising the contractual terms as soon as practicable.”

StarHub, which received spectrum rights jointly with M1, said the preferred 5G technology partner, subject to final contract, is Nokia for the 5G radio access network. Nokia is also the preferred technology supplier for StarHub’s 5G core and mmWave networks. The Singapore company is exploring other network elements with Nokia, Huawei Technologies Co., and ZTE Corp., it said.

TPG Telecom said it’s an active member of the Telecom Infra Project and “will leverage the extensive OpenRAN vendor community along with Huawei’s advanced network equipment” for the implementation of 5G services.

Singapore’s 5G Network
Singtel and the StarHub-M1 group plan to introduce a standalone 5G network starting from January 2021. The country aims to have 5G coverage for at least half of the nation by the end of 2022 and the entire island by 2025. The plan sets up Singapore to join countries in the region such as China and South Korea, which have begun to offer commercial 5G services.

The rollout is coming at a time when measures to curb the coronavirus have forced people around the world to stay and work from home, testing digital services and connectivity like never before. The technology is crucial for applications from autonomous driving to remote surgery. The announcement is also just a day after general elections were declared for July 10.

US, China
The Singapore telcos’ decision on providers comes amid worsening tensions between the U.S. and China. The U.S. administration has banned Huawei from its market for telecom equipment, as part of an effort to curb its presence in 5G networks globally.

The Pentagon, in letters to lawmakers dated June 24, said it put Huawei on a list of 20 companies it says are owned or controlled by China’s military. While the move’s implications were not immediately clear, it opens the company to potential additional U.S. sanctions.

Singapore has close economic and political ties with the U.S. and China, and last year indicated it would let its telco companies decide for themselves on suppliers. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said earlier this year it hadn’t banned Huawei, but would evaluate it based on operational requirements.

https://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/h...5-g-networks-to-ericsson-nokia-015519859.html
China is not Singapore friend
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Singtel is a staunch supporter of ZTE.
ZTE equipments are used for important clients of Singtel and ZTE cooperates with HW for network infrastructure.
Some years back, Stinktel installed Huawei infrastructure at the ulu Bukit Timah facility and quietly retrenched local engineers and replaced them with Tiongs.
The engineers were not compensated fairly and were pissed off.
 
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