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5G Standalone January 2022 – Member Report with Annex

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5G Standalone January 2022 – Member Report with Annex

As of end of December 2021

Operators are increasingly experimenting with and deploying 5G standalone (SA) networks. With a totally new, cloud-based, virtualised, microservices-based core infrastructure, some of the anticipated benefits of introducing 5G SA technologies include faster connection times (lower latency), support for massive numbers of devices, programmable systems enabling faster and more agile creation of services and network slices, with improved support for SLA management within those slices, and the advent of voice-over new radio (VoNR). Introduction of 5G SA is expected to facilitate simplification of architectures, improve security and reduce costs. 5G SA is expected to enable customisation and open up new service and revenue opportunities tailored to enterprise, industrial and government customers.

GSA is tracking the emergence of the 5G SA system, including the availability of chipsets and devices for customers, plus the testing and then deployment of 5G SA networks by public mobile network operators as well as private network operators. This paper is the latest in an ongoing series of papers summarising market trends, drawing on the data collected in GSA’s various databases covering chipsets, devices, spectrum and networks.

Investment in 5G SA by public and private network operators

5G SA networks can be deployed in a variety of scenarios: as an overlay for a public 5G non-SA (NSA) network, as a greenfield 5G deployment for a public network operator without a separate LTE network, or as a private network deployment for an enterprise, utility, education, government or any other organisation requiring its own private campus network.

GSA has identified 99 operators in 50 countries/territories worldwide that have been investing in public 5G SA networks (in the form of trials, planned or actual deployments). This equates to 20.6% of the 481 operators known to be investing in 5G licences, trials or deployments of any type.

At least 20 operators in 16 countries/territories are now understood to have launched public 5G SA networks. A further five have deployed 5G SA technology but not yet launched services or have only soft-launched them. In addition to these, at least 25 operators have been catalogued as deploying or piloting 5G standalone for public networks, and 27 as planning to deploy the technology, so the launches catalogued by GSA so far will be the first of many. GSA has also recorded 22 operators as being involved in evaluations/tests/trials of 5G SA.

In addition to the investment in 5G SA for public mobile networks mentioned above, a number of organisations are testing, piloting or deploying 5G SA technologies for private networks. GSA has developed a database tracking private mobile network licences, trials and deployments. As of November 2021, it had collated information about 775 organisations known to be deploying LTE or 5G private mobile networks, or known to have been granted a licence suitable for the deployment of a private LTE or 5G network so far. Of those, 166 are known to be using 5G networks (excluding those labelled as 5G-ready) for private mobile network pilots or deployments. Of those, 32 (slightly more than 19% of them) are known to be working with 5G SA already, including manufacturers, academic organisations, commercial research institutes, construction, communications/IT services, rail and aviation organisations.

The private mobile networks database is available to GSA Members and Associates.

5G Standalone January 2022 – Member Report with Annex

 

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5G Standalone January 2022 - Member Report with Annex

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5G Standalone January 2022 – Member Report with Annex

As of end of December 2021

Operators are increasingly experimenting with and deploying 5G standalone (SA) networks. With a totally new, cloud-based, virtualised, microservices-based core infrastructure, some of the anticipated benefits of introducing 5G SA technologies include faster connection times (lower latency), support for massive numbers of devices, programmable systems enabling faster and more agile creation of services and network slices, with improved support for SLA management within those slices, and the advent of voice-over new radio (VoNR). Introduction of 5G SA is expected to facilitate simplification of architectures, improve security and reduce costs. 5G SA is expected to enable customisation and open up new service and revenue opportunities tailored to enterprise, industrial and government customers.

GSA is tracking the emergence of the 5G SA system, including the availability of chipsets and devices for customers, plus the testing and then deployment of 5G SA networks by public mobile network operators as well as private network operators. This paper is the latest in an ongoing series of papers summarising market trends, drawing on the data collected in GSA’s various databases covering chipsets, devices, spectrum and networks.

Investment in 5G SA by public and private network operators

5G SA networks can be deployed in a variety of scenarios: as an overlay for a public 5G non-SA (NSA) network, as a greenfield 5G deployment for a public network operator without a separate LTE network, or as a private network deployment for an enterprise, utility, education, government or any other organisation requiring its own private campus network.

GSA has identified 99 operators in 50 countries/territories worldwide that have been investing in public 5G SA networks (in the form of trials, planned or actual deployments). This equates to 20.6% of the 481 operators known to be investing in 5G licences, trials or deployments of any type.

At least 20 operators in 16 countries/territories are now understood to have launched public 5G SA networks. A further five have deployed 5G SA technology but not yet launched services or have only soft-launched them. In addition to these, at least 25 operators have been catalogued as deploying or piloting 5G standalone for public networks, and 27 as planning to deploy the technology, so the launches catalogued by GSA so far will be the first of many. GSA has also recorded 22 operators as being involved in evaluations/tests/trials of 5G SA.

In addition to the investment in 5G SA for public mobile networks mentioned above, a number of organisations are testing, piloting or deploying 5G SA technologies for private networks. GSA has developed a database tracking private mobile network licences, trials and deployments. As of November 2021, it had collated information about 775 organisations known to be deploying LTE or 5G private mobile networks, or known to have been granted a licence suitable for the deployment of a private LTE or 5G network so far. Of those, 166 are known to be using 5G networks (excluding those labelled as 5G-ready) for private mobile network pilots or deployments. Of those, 32 (slightly more than 19% of them) are known to be working with 5G SA already, including manufacturers, academic organisations, commercial research institutes, construction, communications/IT services, rail and aviation organisations.

The private mobile networks database is available to GSA Members and Associates.

5G Standalone January 2022 – Member Report with Annex

 

LinkedIn

Twitter

YouTube

Weibo

WeChat: GSA Express

 

5G Standalone January 2022 - Member Report with Annex

© GSA 2021

https://gsacom.com

 

5G Standalone January 2022 – Member Report with Annex
Date: 11th Jan 2022
Type: GSA Report
Technology: 5G
Originator: GSA