Why The EU Is Betting Big On 5G?
Why The EU Is Betting Big On 5G?
Why The EU Is Betting Big On 5G?
research eu
FOCUS MAGAZINE
WHY THE EU IS
BETTING BIG ON
5G
Digital Agenda
Europe
N15
research eu
FOCUS MAGAZINE
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5G
Editorial coordination
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Smart
Grids
Entertainment
Apps beyond
imagination
Security &
surveillance
eHealth
priority
Smart
parking
Connected
house
Domotics
European Union
Smart
Car
Car-to-car
communication
Water leakages
Smart
wearables
Water quality
WHY THE EU IS
BETTING BIG ON 5G
FOREWORD
5
5
20
20
21
23
23
Why 5G is so important
What is 5G?
24
5G applications:
shaping the Internet of Things
10
Network Functions as a
Service over Virtualised
Infrastructures (T-NOVA)
24
11
AN R&D PATH
TO EU LEADERSHIP
12
25
26
INTERVIEW
26
14
14
Collaborative leadership
15
SPOTLIGHT ON FP7
RESEARCH
29
16
29
16
31
INTERVIEW
18
INTERVIEW
32
18
32
19
33
33
34
19
YEAR
STANDARDS
TECHNOLOGY
BANDWIDTH
DATA RATES
Early 80s
AMPS, TACS
Analog
SMS
MMS
INTERNET
ACCESS
TV
SMS
MMS
INTERNET
ACCESS
VIDEO
CALLS
MOBILE
TV
TV
SMS
MMS
1991
GSM, GPRS, EDGE
Digital
Narrow Band
< 80 - 100 Kbit/s
VIDEO
CALLS
MOBILE
TV
2001
UMTS / HSPA
Digital
Broad Band
Up to 2 Mbit/s
GAMING
CLOUD
SERVICES COMPUTING
2010
LTE, LTE Advanced
Digital
Mobile Broad Band
xDSL-like experience
1 hour HD movie in
6 minutes
European Union
1G
2G
3G
4G
5G
NorthernStock, Thinkstock
FOREWORD
By the next decade, the digital economy should be a reality in all sectors of activity.
As Connectivity becomes more and more ubiquitous, more reliable and offers high speed
and higher capacity, it will become the new lifeblood of the digital economy and society.
The impact of 5G will extend well beyond telecommunications. It will induce a paradigm
shift in a number of existing industries and trigger the emergence of new industries and
ecosystems. Communications networks in the 5G era will also have more important societal roles than today: by connecting people, machines and things on a massive scale, it will
facilitate the delivery of personalised healthcare and support an ageing society, it will help
optimise transports and logistics, it will enhance access to culture and education for all, and
it may virtually revolutionise public services.
We in Europe are already embarked on this trailblazing journey. In cooperation with
industry, we launched the 5G Public-Private Partnership (5G PPP). The Commission
has committed EUR 700 million of funding under the EUs Horizon 2020 research
& innovation programme to accelerate the development of 5G. We are also establishing
strategic cooperation agreements with key partners worldwide to achieve a common vision
by end 2015 on what should be the main 5G functionalities and the global timetable to
move from research to deployment.
To achieve all of this, the EU needs strategic investments in infrastructures and the development of innovative services. This is why EU support to research efforts will be complemented by support to private investments through the EUR 315 billion plan of President
Juncker.
Building on Europes strong track record in telecommunications technologies which dates
back to the invention of the GSM standard, and with the massive efforts we have committed so far, we are confident that Europe has a unique opportunity to become a major player
in the 5G era. This is essential because we believe that the communications infrastructure
should become the most important of all infrastructures over the next decade, not only for
the economy but for society as a whole.
Gnther Oettinger, Commissioner
Digital Economy & Society
losik-5, Thinkstock
WHY 5G IS SO IMPORTANT
With mobile traffic expected to grow by a factor of 1 000 by 2020, and the
number of connected users to multiply 10 to 100-fold, the world clearly
needs new communications infrastructure the like of which we have never
seen before.
WHAT IS 5G?
With each new generation of communications networks systems, from 1G to
the more recently deployed 3G and 4G, connectivity becomes more prominent
in our lives. These network technologies will further be extended by 5G, as
the rapidly growing demand for digital products and services is vastly
multiplying the amounts of data flowing through networks worldwide. This
expansion is predicted to continue exponentially in the near future.
Prykhodov, Thinkstock
5G CAN ONLY
WORK THROUGH
STANDARDS
For 5G to become the Any Time, Any Where, Any Device technology
network which users, businesses and engineers are dreaming
about, its got to be based on a global standard.
feoris, Thinkstock
5G APPLICATIONS:
SHAPING THE
INTERNET OF THINGS
Whilst 5G promises major technical advances and better geographical coverage,
its success will largely depend on its added value for consumers. Researchers
are well aware of this, and will focus their efforts on various fields of applications
including eHealth, smart grids, smart cars, connected homes, entertainment,
and asset tracking, to name a few.
Smart
Grids
Entertainment
Apps beyond
imagination
Security &
surveillance
eHealth
priority
Smart
parking
5G
Connected
house
European Union
Domotics
congestion
Smart
Car
Car-to-car
communication
Water leakages
Smart
wearables
Water quality
Smart everything
Over the past few years, we have seen
smart cities, cars and homes progressively evolving from vague concepts
to concrete solutions. What 5G offers
is to set the stage for these new technologies, with enough capacity to welcome billions of connected devices
and enough flexibility to adapt to each
of these devices needs, thereby optimising battery life. For this reason, 5G
could be defined as a necessary evolution setting the stage for a mobile
revolution.
A typical example is transport: Whilst
some high-end cars can already connect to the Internet to provide the
driver with real-time traffic information, 5G would add an additional layer
of connectivity to the mix: your car will
talk to the other cars and to the
infrastructure, so that you can obtain
detailed information about traffic
jams along the way and even get
10
AN INDUSTRY
LOOK AT 5G
BENEFITS
of 5G. Not only will the new infrastructures allow for high-quality connections even in rural or remote areas,
but crowded spaces will finally cease
to be an arena where more people
inexorably translates into lesser data
transfer rates.
11
THE RACE IS ON
Billions of euros are being invested in public and privately funded research
in a race to prove the best 5G technologies before 2020.
Ximagination, Thinkstock
ARTQU, Thinkstock
12
5G A STRATEGIC
INVESTMENT FOR EUROPE
Investment is vital to ensuring that Europe plays a leading role in the
development of 5G technology. It has been estimated that private companies
will spend over EUR 234 billion in network infrastructure and technology over
the coming decade, with competition to take 5G worldwide likely to be fierce.
As this infrastructure is crucial for the entire economy; Europe must invest
now if it is to secure its global competitiveness.
An employment generatoror
Investment will help Europes telecoms sector crucial to
economic growth and job creation tap into the growth
opportunities stemming from the convergence between
IT and telecommunications.
The advent of 5G presents a unique opportunity, with timely
and targeted investment ensuring that new high-tech jobs
are created in Europe. Other regions such as China, Japan,
Korea and the US have also recognised the strategic nature
of this domain, and initiated significant research activities
to define the networks of tomorrow and thus boost growth.
This is a global competition in which Europe cannot be left
behind.
33%
uropean investment in 5G
research will be amounting to
EUR 700 million over seven years,
while private contributions under the
5G PPP are expected to reach at least
EUR3.5 billion by 2020. A total of
EUR125 million has been made available in the first call for proposals,
Advanced 5G Network Infrastructure
for the Future Internet, which closed
on 25 November 2014.
Funding for ICT-related topics can be
found in all the core pillars as defined
in Horizon 2020, from Excellence
Science and Industrial Leadership to
Societal Challenges, and investment
in ICT is set to increase by about 25%
compared to the Seventh Framework
1.2%
Increased broadband
penetration can create
additional GDP growth
of just over 1.2% in
high-income economies.
968 000
In Germany between
2010 and 2020,
broadband investments
are expected to add
EUR 170.9 billion to
GDP, along with
968000 jobs.
13
14
INTERVIEW
MRIO CAMPOLARGO
How are partnerships with the likes of South Korea and Japan
helping the EU? What other help would Europe need?
We need strong global commitments to avoid competing standards, so that we have one global 5G.
These partnerships are also essential to agree on a set of policies, like spectrum allocation. We are
preparing joint actions with South Korea and Japan and we will explore future cooperation with China
and the US. The next step for 2015 is to agree on a common global definition of the 5G technical
parameters. Besides the international partners, we will also need strong alignment and support
between the EU countries to successfully prepare the grounds for 5G deployment in Europe,
as of 2020. 4G was invented in Europe, but today it is mostly deployed in Asia and America. I believe
we can reverse that trend.
15
COLLABORATIVE
LEADERSHIP
Strategic alliances
with international
partners will be
necessary to steer
technological
development in the
desired direction
Whilst the industry intends to go for
one global standard, governments
need to provide support beyond financial aspects, also by making sure the
right policy and regulation is in place
before deployment. Besides a global
commitment to avoid competing
standards, global agreements on a set
of crucial policies such as spectrum
allocation are also needed.
Europe is in a strong position, having
the competitive industrial base, the
know-how and excellent research
teams bringing together academia
slav, Thinkstock
With its 40% global market share in network technologies and EUR 700
million of funding under Horizon 2020, Europe stands a good chance of taking
the lead in the 5G race. But this cannot be done without securing key alliances
with other regions.
Building on EU
strengths
The EU rationale behind these partnerships is threefold. First, they can
accelerate the pace of consensusbuilding worldwide, which means
EU citizens can benefit from 5G benefits as early as possible. Secondly,
they contribute to strengthening the
European industry by supporting their
views and developing their expertise,
thereby giving rise to new champions
and new ecosystems. Highly competitive EU sectors such as the automotive, broadcast and health services
industries, along with disruptive and
innovative startups, are already well
placed to find early adopters of 5G
technology worldwide. Finally, these
partnerships are expected to help
avoid issues related to fragmentation
of approaches and standards between
regions and protracted battles around
intellectual property.
16
HYWARDS, Thinkstock
would be better supported if we can develop new technologies that do not have to take into account limitations in
the current designs, Mr. Queseth says. For example, how
can wireless infrastructures move towards higher frequencies, thereby achieving greater wireless broadband capacities and at the same time possibly simplify their
implementation and reducing costs.
17
18
INTERVIEW
One of the things we are working on is how to enable smaller cells and thus use smaller, less powerful antennas. Smaller antennas with lower power use also means that the devices will be easier to
place and hide. We are also working on technologies to allow more traffic from a single antenna site
which should at least help overcome the problem of the growing need for more antenna sites.
net-tech future
THE ROAD
TO UBIQUITOUS
CONNECTIVITY
5G will see us enter a brave new world of pervasive service. As such, 5G
is said to be not just another step along the mobile connectivity path but an
entirely new way of managing connectivity. Hardly surprising then that entirely
new innovations and approaches will be necessary to achieve it.
Three EU-funded projects are exploring the questions, requirements and
potential solutions thrown up by 5G ubiquitous connectivity.
19
20
21
SEEMINGLY INFINITE
CAPACITY
The European Commission anticipates that by 2020 seven billion people will
be connected through seven trillion devices. How to enable the instant
connection of any device, at any time, anywhere on such scale will require an
innovative new network architecture.
22
23
INTRODUCING
FLEXIBILITY TO 5G
tashka2000, Thinkstock
24
MOBILE OPPORTUNISTIC
TRAFFIC OFFLOADING (MOTO)
Mobile data has grown so fast over the last four years
20-fold according to Cisco that something has to be
done to offload the traffic onto less critical infrastructure
in order to avoid over-congested networks. The architecture
designed must also be scalable upwards to accommodate
the 5G revolution. The idea of the MOTO project is to
develop offloading strategies to exploit the diversity of
wireless access technologies to switch traffic from one network to another before they become congested. Offloading,
for example, from cellular to WiFi networks, or to multihop ad hoc communications directly between user devices,
will prevent networks from becoming overloaded as
demand heats up. By differentiating between heavy and
light users (20% of heavy users generate 80% of the traffic), MOTO puts the customer at the heart of the offloading
strategies by providing operators with the flexibility to
elaborate tiered pricing taking into account type of traffic
(e.g. in relation to delay tolerance) and user consumption.
MOTO
NETWORK FUNCTIONS
AS A SERVICE OVER
VIRTUALISED
INFRASTRUCTURES (T-NOVA)
Dr Anastasios Kourtis, of NCSR Demokritos Research Center
in Greece, coordinates the T-NOVA project which is building
a marketplace for software developers to offer virtualised
functions replacing hardware components in networks.
Below he explains his hopes for the platform.
Which network functions can be virtualised?
Indeed, most network functions can be deployed as
virtualised appliances. A software developer may have
created, for example, a new intrusion detection algorithm
and could sell it over the network operators marketplace
as part of a virtual security appliance. As another example,
virtualised media transcoders could be deployed into the
network to achieve better mobile video quality.
25
scanrail, Thinkstock
Based on an infographic
from the LIGHTNESS website
5G-PPP
26
INNOVATIVE PARTNERSHIPS
The European Commission recognises the emerging paradigm change caused by the technology shift from traditional hardware-oriented network management systems
to more software-based network management. It will
require a drastically different set of skills and know-how,
27
UNITED TO MEET
THE TECHNOLOGICAL
CHALLENGES
The impact wireless
connectivity will have on our
daily lives in five years time
is as hard to predict today
as it was five years ago.
One thing we do know: we
are looking at a revolution in
ubiquitous ultra-broadband,
not an evolution. A far
higher proportion of the
population is continually
adopting new technological
hardware that seeks real
time information and an
immersive experience.
This means we now need to
go beyond a client server
model in which network
infrastructure is reduced to
a pipe full of bits and bytes.
Based on an infographic
from the 5G PPP
28
x1000
7 billion
Connecting
7 billion people
7 trillion
Connecting
7 trillion things
90%
Saving 90%
energy
0 latency
Perceiving
zero downtime
European Union
100%
29
without infinite
energy consumption
Mari-Nolle Jgo-Laveissire,
Executive Vice President of Innovation,
Marketing and Technologies at
Orange, explains that electricity consumption and CO 2 emission are
sharply increasing as customers ramp
up their digital usage. 5G must
address this issue if we want to keep
our ecologic and economic bill at
a reasonable level, she says. Orange
is willing to improve energy efficiency. But how is that to be done?
Tighter privacy
The Chief Advisor at Turk Telekom Argela, Mustafa Ergen,
says user-controlled privacy is an area that is being recognised as ever more important in software development.
We started our Software Defined Networking in another
context but it will evolve towards context-aware security
and privacy especially for national networks, he explained.
But some feel intelligent discussion should move on from
debates on net-neutrality and privacy to what it makes
sense to do from both a privacy and optimisation point
of view. Privacy should be at the right level to protect
the users interests but also at the right level to allow
maximum optimisation of the network for each user,
Mr Weldon feels.
mysondanube, Thinkstock
geeunjin, Thinkstock
30
31
Reducing the cost of service provision and running a network is essential to inspiring investment in innovative solutions. Streamlining standardisation through early
collaboration and agreement will help bring down costs. 5G
PPP will first be a place to build a shared vision among all
European players about 5G goals, scope and system
choices, believes Ms Jgo-Laveissire, It will also be a powerful brand to defend European industry role in the world.
Achieving this will give a competitive advantage to the
whole European economy.
LDProd, Thinkstock
Standardisation and cost of ownership are also preoccupying the 5G PPP. Dr Zhou believes that the partnership will
help here too. The 5G PPP will make it possible to achieve
an early consensus on a number of key issues that will enable us to move forward, he says. These include a common
5G vision, scenarios and use cases, spectrum utilisation,
regulatory issues and pre-standardisation. It will also enable Europe to collaborate in order to reach early agreement
on what needs to be tested and verified locally and through
large-scale trials.
In 2012:
2 646
1 630
Global telecommunications
market was worth
EUR 1 630 billion.
PROBLEM-SOLVING EXTENDS
BEYOND THE KEY AREAS
OF RESEARCH
32
INTERVIEW
Yes, spectrum is and will remain a major challenge for the success and early rollout of 5G. We dont
have enough spectrum in general and 5G is much about optimising the use of spectrum. But clearly,
allocating more spectrum to 4G and later 5G would help and this is a global challenge. In light of the
long decision cycles for spectrum allocation and assignment, it would be very timely for Europe to
agree on a scenario already in 2015. This would help secure more spectrum bands at international
(ITU) level for WRC-15 while preparing properly for WRC-19. An additional challenge will be to find a
globally harmonised band for 5G roaming since all suitable spectrum is already in use in one or
another part of the world.
4G has been available for a while now, but lots of regions are
still relying only on 2G or 3G coverage. How can we ensure this
doesnt happen with 5G?
This is a very pertinent question and I wish that Europe would today have reached a greater degree
of deployment for 4G, compared to Japan, South Korea or the USA, for instance. At the moment we
are gradually catching up with 4G deployments in Europe. We have positive signals from telecom
operators that indicate that their 4G investments will reach EUR 2 billion or more per year over the
next period. This could help achieve 80% of 4G coverage in Europe before the end of the decade.
Countries like Sweden, Portugal and the Netherlands have already reached this 80% threshold and
this is very encouraging.
In any case 3G and even 2G may still be in used in the future for specific usages, but I would expect
a gradual phasing out. 5G will be a heterogeneous and ubiquitous network, meaning that it will use
all available networking resources, from 2G to 4G to Wi-Fi and even device-to-device, and optimise
users quality of experience. An efficient 4G infrastructure will be needed to enable the future 5G
deployment and the two infrastructures will complement each other for most of the next decade. 5G
deployments are not foreseen before 2020 in the best case scenario and a lot of R&D is still needed
to validate the technology and the concepts. We should therefore be able to prepare the deployment
of 5G more thoroughly.
33
Rach27, Thinkstock
5G will be about enabling the transition toward the full digital economy,
explains Mari-Nolle Jgo-Laveissire,
Executive Vice President of Innovation,
Marketing and Technologies at
Orange. To incubate this transformation, the 5G PPP brings together a
broad range of companies from the
telecom and IT sectors including small
firms, as well as a number of research
institutes and organisations. This vertical mobilisation is matched by the
horizontal alliance between the
LEVERAGING EUROPES
STRENGTHS
In this crucial start-up phase, public support for 5G can produce a decisive
multiplier effect. Authorities from the local to the European level must pull
their weight.
34
2015
2015
End of 2015
2016
2016
2018
Technology
Extension of trials
showcasing at
to non-ICT
PyeongChang 2018 stakeholders.
Olympics.
2019
System definition
and optimisation.
Pan-European
experimental
infrastructure.
Experimentation and
validation trials.
Collection of
standardisation
requirements.
2018
Identification of
frequency bands for
mobile and wireless
communications.
Support of
regulatory bodies for
allocation of newly
identified frequency
bands.
2017
20162018
20182020
Production of
standards.
2020
2020
Close to
Over 1
Operational
commercial
Gigabit
deployment
systems
bandwidth at of 5G, to cope
deployment
the Tokyo
with more
with selected Stadium, for
data traffic
customers.
the 2020
than we are
Olympics.
seeing today.
Large-scale
demonstrations and
trials.
Beyond 2020
First commercial
offers by telecom
operators.
2021
35
More info:
Network Technologies - Unit E1:
http://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/en/network-technologies
Follow-us: @NetTechEU
See also:
EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation:
http://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/
5G Public Private Partnership: http://5g-ppp.eu/
NetWorld2020 European Technology Platform: http://www.networld2020.org/
About DG CONNECT
The Directorate-General helps harness information
and communications technologies in order to create
jobs and generate economic growth. It also aims
to provide better goods and services for all, and to use
the power of digital technologies to create a better
world, now and for future generations.
ZZ-AJ-14-002-EN-N
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