As the United States grapples with the 5G rollout affecting airlines, a European Union watchdog warned on Monday that the EU faces much bigger economic and security threats unless member countries step up cooperation.
The alarm bells are included in a special report on the 27-nation bloc’s preparations for 5G, the fifth and next generation of wireless communications. 5G is projected to propel the world into a new digital age with greater technological innovations and vulnerabilities.
The European Court of Auditors study has a two-pronged clarion call, saying Europe is falling behind North America and Asia in the rollout of 5G networks, and the EU needs to beef up its strategy to counter accompanying national-security risks.
By mid-decade, just 35 percent of all mobile connections in Europe will be based on 5G compared with 51 percent in North America and 53 percent in Australia, Japan, Singapore, and South Korea, according to a telecommunications industry study cited by the ECA. The projected 2025 figure for China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan is 48 percent. As a result, most EU countries may also fail to achieve a more ambitious joint goal for 2030: making 5G services available to all population segments.
“There is a high risk that the 2025 deadline — and therefore also 2030 one for the coverage of all populated areas — will be missed by a majority of member states,” the ECA said. The lost economic benefits for the EU could be large. 5G is expected to trigger exponential increases in data consumption in a bloc, where services account for about 70 percent of gross domestic product.
Citing a separate, tech-industry study, the ECA indicated that 5G could add as much as EUR 1 trillion (roughly Rs. 84,46,400 crore) and create or transform 2 million jobs between 2021 and 2025.
But such economic rewards require a lot more spending on 5G, whose deployment across the EU until 2025 could cost almost EUR 400 billion (roughly Rs. 33,78,560 crore). These funds need to come primarily from mobile network operators, it said.
Differences among EU countries over 5G security partly explain the delays in the infrastructure rollout, the ECA said. It highlighted member-state divergences in the treatment of Chinese 5G vendors such as Huawei, which face US allegations of serving the geopolitical ambitions of China’s Communist Party.
While the US government has taken a hard line against Chinese suppliers’ involvement in American 5G networks, the European Commission — the EU’s executive arm — has tread more carefully. A key constraint for the European Commission is that national-security decisions remain in member countries’ hands.
Although the EU has developed a “toolbox” to align national approaches to classifying high-risk 5G vendors, ambiguities exist. The whole initiative needs more bloc-wide regulatory teeth, according to the ECA.
“There remains a risk that the toolbox in itself cannot guarantee that member states address security aspects in a concerted manner,” the organization said.
The European Commission sought to offer assurances on 5G security after the ECA published its report, saying in a statement that it’s “very attentive to reinforcing the security of 5G networks” and that, based on the toolbox, “most member states have managed to protect the most sensitive parts of the networks from high-risk suppliers.”
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By mid-decade, just 35 percent of all mobile connections in Europe will be based on 5G compared with 51 percent in North America and 53 percent in Australia, Japan, Singapore, and South Korea, according to a telecommunications industry study cited by the ECA. The projected 2025 figure for China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan is 48 percent. As a result, most EU countries may also fail to achieve a more ambitious joint goal for 2030: making 5G services available to all population segments.
“There is a high risk that the 2025 deadline — and therefore also 2030 one for the coverage of all populated areas — will be missed by a majority of member states,” the ECA said. The lost economic benefits for the EU could be large. 5G is expected to trigger exponential increases in data consumption in a bloc, where services account for about 70 percent of gross domestic product.
Citing a separate, tech-industry study, the ECA indicated that 5G could add as much as EUR 1 trillion (roughly Rs. 84,46,400 crore) and create or transform 2 million jobs between 2021 and 2025.
But such economic rewards require a lot more spending on 5G, whose deployment across the EU until 2025 could cost almost EUR 400 billion (roughly Rs. 33,78,560 crore). These funds need to come primarily from mobile network operators, it said.
Differences among EU countries over 5G security partly explain the delays in the infrastructure rollout, the ECA said. It highlighted member-state divergences in the treatment of Chinese 5G vendors such as Huawei, which face US allegations of serving the geopolitical ambitions of China’s Communist Party.
While the US government has taken a hard line against Chinese suppliers’ involvement in American 5G networks, the European Commission — the EU’s executive arm — has tread more carefully. A key constraint for the European Commission is that national-security decisions remain in member countries’ hands.
Although the EU has developed a “toolbox” to align national approaches to classifying high-risk 5G vendors, ambiguities exist. The whole initiative needs more bloc-wide regulatory teeth, according to the ECA.
“There remains a risk that the toolbox in itself cannot guarantee that member states address security aspects in a concerted manner,” the organization said.
The European Commission sought to offer assurances on 5G security after the ECA published its report, saying in a statement that it’s “very attentive to reinforcing the security of 5G networks” and that, based on the toolbox, “most member states have managed to protect the most sensitive parts of the networks from high-risk suppliers.”
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