SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> No Category

China's Huawei wins first 3G contract in Europe

China's Huawei wins first 3G contract in Europe

By:  John Blau  On: 14 Dec 2004 For: IDG News Service (Düsseldorf Bureau) Creator

Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. has won a contract to build a 3G (third-generation) high-speed mobile Internet network in the Netherlands, its first European order for the new high-speed mobile technology, the company said Thursday.

As IT and telecom equipment vendors in Europe and the U.S. outsource areas of their production to China, that country's largest manufacturer of communications systems is clinching contracts in their own backyards.

Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. has won a contract to build a 3G (third-generation) high-speed mobile Internet network in the Netherlands, its first European order for the new high-speed mobile technology, the company said Thursday.

Telfort BV awarded the contract for an undisclosed sum to Huawei, which also agreed to launch a research and development center focusing on mobile data services in Amsterdam.

The Dutch deal came one day after the Chinese manufacturer announced the commercial launch of a CDMA2000-1x (Code Division Multiplex Access) network built with its equipment in the U.S. NTCH Inc., of Los Angeles, will begin selling flat-rate voice and data services in Southern California and Arizona next week under the Clear Talk brand. The mobile network is the first for Huawei in the U.S.

Both deals may point to a possible shift in carrier procurement strategies, which have traditionally favored local manufacturers such as Lucent Technologies Inc. and Motorola Inc. in the U.S., and Nokia Corp., Siemens AG and Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson in Europe.

"As far as reasons to be concerned, I definitely think all European equipment suppliers are going to take notice of Huawei now," said Jason Marchek, senior analyst with Current Analysis Inc. "Even though the deal with Telfort isn't a tier one win, it's still a significant win."

Huawei's assault on the European networking market comes on the heals of a couple of agreements that the company has struck with Siemens. The German manufacturer, which is shifting some its production to China in a move to lower operating costs, has teamed with its Chinese rival in the hope of expanding into the huge Chinese mobile phone market.

In February, Siemens and Huawei formed a joint venture for manufacturing new mobile broadband systems, aimed mostly at the huge Chinese market. The joint venture, in which the German company has a 51 percent stake, will develop, manufacture and sell high-speed mobile network systems based on the Time Division Synchronous Code Division Multiple Access (TD-SCDMA) technology. The technology, which has been largely developed in China, is being promoted by the Chinese government as a third 3G standard, alongside Wideband CDMA (W-CDMA ) and CDMA2000.

In October, Siemens struck another deal with Huawei aimed at the enterprise networking market. Under the deal, the German company now resells routers and switches from Huawei's Quidway product line.

"I don't think Siemens views the Dutch 3G contract as an end-run or something that has come completely unexpected or is in violation of the two companies' agreements," Marchek said. "Huawei is a competitor for CDMA and W-CDMA network infrastructure, and Siemens knows that."


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 363   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




John Blau John Blau is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

N.S. turns ambulances into hotspots
N.S. turns ambulances into hotspotsThe province of Nova Scotia has turned its ambulance fleet into a collection of roaming hotspots. Find out what the province’s Emergency Health Services division is doing and what the technology means for the future of mobile networking
Dell offers Canadian laptop users 3G via Gobi chip
Dell offers Canadian laptop users 3G via Gobi chipThe company adopts a product from Qualcomm in its Latitude, Precision and consumer models that will make use of the High-Speed Packet Access protocols to connect to EV-DO networks
Ericsson brings Redback into fold
Ericsson brings Redback into fold  With its US$2 billion acquisition of Redback Networks last month, Ericsson is now in direct competition with some of its biggest partners — Cisco and Juniper — in the red-hot carrier edge routing market. However, the company says the move is more of an effort to obtain IP and Ethernet technology it can use to pull its telecom and mobile infrastructure products forward into the IP-based future of telecom, says Karl Thedeen, vice-president of wireline products for the Swedish vendor. But that’s not to say Ericsson isn’t looking to grow Redback’s market share and technology itself. Thedeen expanded on the merger with Network World. [The following is an edited transcript.]
Your future phone
just basking in the afterglow of having bullied my cell carrier into a better rate and a better phone by threatening to go to the competition ... web surfing, streaming audio and tv, built-in camera (another excuse to keep me out of the gym).in three to five years time when i'm ready for a new cell phone (provided, of course, this one doesn't somehow end up in the toilet or
First mobile LTE handover, says Nortel
nortel and lg electronics say they have taken the next-generation high speed wireless lte technology from the labs to the streets to complete the world's first mobile lte live air handover. engineers at nortel's research and development centre of excellence in ottawa showed streaming hd video on an early lte mobile device from lg electronics while driving at sp
Recession hits WiMAX market
a day after the bank of canada declared we’re entering a recession, a market research firm predicts the troubled economy will stifle sales of wimax equipment next year.campbell, calif.-based infonetics research inc. wednesday released its wimax and wi-fi mesh network equipment and devices repor

Comments (0)

No Comments!
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.