Digital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • The End User Billing (EUB) Model And Its Impact On Nigeria’s USSD Banking Landscape
  • Driving Digital Inclusion: NCC, Stakeholders Unite To Tackle Nigeria’s Rural Connectivity Gap
  • Neliaku, NIPR President To Review GOCOP Book On Online Publishing
  • Zinox Technologies To Represent Nigeria At VivaTech Paris 2025
  • Meta Partners FMCIDE To Launch Llama Impact Accelerator Program
  • Is This the End Of USSD Banking In Nigeria?
  • “You Need The Combined Strength Of Tinubu, Obi, Atiku To Be A Successful Entrepreneur In Nigeria” – Leo Stan Ekeh
  • TD Africa Strengthens Strategic Alliance With Dell Technologies
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Digital Times NigeriaDigital Times Nigeria
  • Home
  • Telecoms
    • Broadband
  • Business
    • Banking
    • Finance
  • Editorial
    • Opinion
    • Big Story
  • TechExtra
    • Fintech
    • Innovation
  • Interview
  • Media
    • Social
    • Broadcasting
Digital Times Nigeria
Home » 5G Will Reach 22m Subscribers In Middle East & Africa By 2024 With GCC Nations To Continue To Lead – Ericsson VP
Interview

5G Will Reach 22m Subscribers In Middle East & Africa By 2024 With GCC Nations To Continue To Lead – Ericsson VP

DigitalTimesNGBy DigitalTimesNG20 May 2020No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
ERICSSON VP
Chafic Traboulsi, vice president and head of networks at Ericsson Middle East and Africa,
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email WhatsApp

 

CommsMEA caught up with Chafic Traboulsi, vice president and head of networks at Ericsson Middle East and Africa, to find out how GCC nations can take the next step down the road to realising its full 5G potential……DigitalTimesNG reproduces the interview…

As operators look to ramp up their 5G offering, how important is spectrum sharing technology going to be?

With 5G networks going live and consumers getting their hands on the first 5G devices, user expectations are high. Communications service providers need to make the best use of their spectrum assets and utilise each band’s performance characteristics to support their business strategies while maintaining coexistence between all technologies deployed in the network.

Ericsson Spectrum Sharing, part of Ericsson Radio System, enables a quick, flexible, and cost-effective upgrade to 5G within existing 4G carriers. Based on traffic demand, the solution will dynamically share the spectrum between 4G and 5G carriers, making the switch on a one-millisecond level to minimise spectrum wastage and provide the best end-user performance.

Ericsson Spectrum Sharing enables a smooth and fast network migration through simultaneous and dynamic support of 4G and 5G within the same spectrum band using the Ericsson Radio System, once operators are ready to make the transition.

The new functionality can be implemented through a remote software installation on Ericsson Radio System radios shipped since 2015. This capability allows communication service providers to deliver nationwide 5G coverage with a much more flexible spectrum migration strategy – removing the need for dedicating existing 4G spectrum assets to 5G statically, which could negatively impact 4G performance.

We should also highlight that 4G/5G dynamic spectrum sharing is the key technology to efficiently deploy the most advanced 5G technology, 5G Standalone. 5G Standalone will enable the ultimate benefits of the 5G and with Ericsson Spectrum Sharing these benefits can be made available throughout the network in all the areas where the 4G signal is currently provided.

READ ALSO  E-Commerce Is Expensive Business, But Konga Planned For It – Ekeh, Zinox Group Chair

How important a region is MEA to Ericsson? What are your key targets for the region in the year ahead?

As a key player in making 5G networks a commercial reality, Ericsson is working closely with partners across the region and has a large number of Memorandums of Understandings – helping service providers to improve their existing consumer business and address previously untapped value chains in the digitalisation of industries.

5G is expected to reach 22 million subscriptions for enhanced mobile broadband in the Middle East and Africa (MEA) by the end of 2024, representing 1 per cent of total mobile subscriptions. This will make 5G the fastest generation of cellular technology to be rolled out on a global scale, according to the Ericsson Mobility Report.

The majority of the 5G subscriptions in the MEA are expected to come from advanced ICT markets like the GCC countries.

With connectivity at the heart of industry transformation, cellular technologies have a significant role to play – not just in the evolution of communication but in the transformation of businesses and societies as a whole.

What were you most looking forward to showcasing at this year’s cancelled MWC event?

The health and safety of our employees, customers and other stakeholders are our highest priority. This is not a decision we have taken lightly. We were looking forward to showcasing our latest innovations at MWC in Barcelona. It is very unfortunate, but we strongly believe the most responsible business decision is to withdraw our participation from this year’s event.

To showcase the company’s portfolio and innovations, Ericsson will take the demos and content created for MWC Barcelona to customers in their home markets with local events called “Ericsson Unboxed”.

READ ALSO  There Are 5 Areas Of Significant Opportunities For Players In The Financial Services Sector In 2023- FirstBank CEO

Last year, the GSMA tipped Middle Eastern telcos to lead on 5G. How will they continue to maintain their leadership position as they look to scale up their 5G networks?

To our great pride, the Middle Eastern telco and the Middle Eastern regulators have ensured that, this time, the Middle East is on the map early when it comes to a new telecom standard generation.

Mainly driven by the GCC, this was made by providing the telcos with affordable 5G frequencies early enough and allowing them to use advanced technologies like the Ericsson Spectrum Sharing without any hinders.

To stay in the lead the telcos have to ensure massive 5G adoption. 2020 and 2021 are the years where we will see that.  They also have to ensure that they start testing the business monetisation side that will come with the Industrial private networks and critical IoT.

We are proud to be supporting our pioneering partners in the MEA region with their 5G switch. Ericsson is the first company to launch live commercial 5G networks on four continents. Today, 70 per cent of the top service providers evaluated in global public 4G network tests use Ericsson’s radios and basebands, which are the key to 5G performance.

And thanks to our ongoing interoperability engagements with six out of six chipset vendors, our 5G technology is evolving continuously to support a variety of 5G devices. That way, we can cater to the wide-ranging 5G use cases of today and tomorrow.

What are your predictions for the year ahead?

READ ALSO  Bell Canada Selects Ericsson For Its 5G Deployment

As market after market switches on 5G, Ericsson is at a truly momentous point in time. No previous generation of mobile technology has had the potential to drive economic growth to the extent that 5G promises. It goes beyond connecting people to fully realising the Internet of Things (IoT) and the Fourth Industrial Revolution. The ongoing health crisis has shown the importance of telecommunications in keeping the world running. 5G is making the future efficiencies and possibilities a reality.

In 2019, Ericsson started the commercial rollout of 5G with operators in advanced markets like the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Ericsson was selected by Batelco to commercially deploy 5G across Bahrain and announced 5G commercial launches with Etisalat, STC and Ooredoo. In addition, it is the first with commercial live networks in four continents and publicly announced 25 live commercial 5G operators globally with 81 commercial 5G contracts signed. Reaching the key technological milestone of deploying 5G networks has been a joint effort – a journey and a collaboration between Ericsson and its world-leading telecom partners. Together we have managed to develop 5G technology based on real business needs.

With commercial 5G networks already live around the globe, the next step is to ensure massive adoption.  We also need to see if 5G will allow businesses of all types to reap the benefits of enhanced mobility, flexibility, reliability and security.

The high performance of 5G networks will make our future more efficient and more connected.

 

2024 5G Ericsson VP GCC Nations Middle East & Africa Subscribers
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleRemote Learning: Children In Nigeria, 12 Other African Countries To Benefit From Airtel, UNICEF Partnership
Next Article The Drama Returns As MultiChoice Nigeria Announces #BBNaija Season 5
DigitalTimesNG
  • X (Twitter)

Related Posts

E-Commerce Is Expensive Business, But Konga Planned For It – Ekeh, Zinox Group Chair

3 August 2023

How 5G Is Boosting Innovation In Sub-Saharan Africa

1 August 2023

Designing The Future: Habeeb Azeez’s Product Design Odyssey

11 July 2023

Tigo Tanzania, Ericsson Launch 5G, Enhance Existing Network

15 February 2023

New Report Shows 5G IoT Connections To Cross 100m By 2026

24 January 2023

There Are 5 Areas Of Significant Opportunities For Players In The Financial Services Sector In 2023- FirstBank CEO

11 January 2023

Comments are closed.

Categories
About
About

Digital Times Nigeria (www.digitaltimesng.com) is an online technology publication of Digital Times Media Services.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Latest Posts

The End User Billing (EUB) Model And Its Impact On Nigeria’s USSD Banking Landscape

12 June 2025

Driving Digital Inclusion: NCC, Stakeholders Unite To Tackle Nigeria’s Rural Connectivity Gap

12 June 2025

Neliaku, NIPR President To Review GOCOP Book On Online Publishing

12 June 2025
Popular Posts

Building Explainable AI (XAI) Dashboards For Non-Technical Stakeholders

2 May 2022

Building Ethical AI Starts With People: How Gabriel Ayodele Is Engineering Trust Through Mentorship

8 January 2024

Gabriel Tosin Ayodele: Leading AI-Powered Innovation In Web3

8 November 2022
© 2025 Digital Times NG. Designed by Max Excellence LLC.
  • Advert Rate
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertisement
  • Private Policy
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.