Making sense of the 5G investment


Johannesburg, 21 Aug 2019

While estimates for global investment into 5G over the next few years vary, one thing is certain: the funds needed to make 5G a reality is easily the largest global capital outlay in telecommunications history. A PwC report on the 5G opportunity estimates the expenditure for the roll-out of 5G infrastructure, such as network densification, equipment upgrades and additional spectrum, will exceed US$57 billion by 2022.

The services that will be based on 5G are enhanced mobile broadband and fixed wireless services, with massive machine-to-machine communications and ultra-reliable low-latency applications set to follow. What remains to be clarified is exactly how operators will monetise these investments and the business and partnership models that will underpin their monetisation objectives.

Enhanced mobile broadband and fixed wireless will have a significant impact on services such as gaming and high-definition and bandwidth-hungry video services. It will remove current limitations of cloud-based gaming caused by less-than-ideal latency. Instead, 5G-powered connectivity will bring latency down to as little as 1ms. It will provide for better video streaming both at home and at streamed social events – particularly for 4K and higher – and deliver vastly improved immersive VR and AR experiences.

One of the biggest challenges that developers of VR and AR technology face is that users have to be in specifically set up locations. Once 5G networks are ubiquitous, it will be possible to provide a uniform experience almost anywhere. The benefits of VR and AR will extend beyond entertainment to sectors such as education and health, where good connectivity can be life-saving and bad connectivity life-threatening.

Massive machine-to-machine communication refers to 5G’s play in the Internet of things, including smart-city ecosystems. It will play a role alongside other complementary LPWAN technologies, such as Sigfox, in providing the wireless network infrastructure for smart cities to function, particularly for essential services such as policing, traffic control, ambulances, the fire brigade and utilities. We are already seeing smart city successes in places such as Barcelona, which uses sensor-based networks for applications ranging from smart streetlights to automated waste disposal to start bringing the dream of a smart city to life.

Ultra-reliable low-latency communications, without which intelligent transportation, remote healthcare and telesurgery, and industrial automation can’t be enabled, are also set to follow later on in the 5G services roadmap. These services need connectivity for high-speed data processing, enabling them to carry out real-time, complex decision-making. Connectivity for this technology, of course, must be ubiquitous, which requires excellent network coverage for consistency and stability.

One of the ways that operators can monetise the 5G opportunity is by creating the virtual networks or network slices to cater for the specific networking and connectivity requirements to support the three categories of use cases mentioned above. Network slicing enables the common, shared physical infrastructure to be used to create virtual networks that satisfy the connectivity, speed and capacity requirements of these use cases. Operators can create network propositions for various market verticals in which they are enablers and partners in that market’s ecosystem, and they can explore monetisation models based on that as opposed to just charging for more data. Fibre densification for 5G means we will see major investment in fibre networks over the next few years as 5G is rolled out.

Dark Fibre Africa (DFA) has been densifying its fibre footprint in the major metros, as it expects these will be the areas where 5G will be rolled out first.

The company has also been exploring ways in which it can make its infrastructure, including manholes and connected buildings, available for small cell deployment. Its open-access model ensures fibre backhaul can be delivered efficiently, reducing the input costs for operators to deliver the 5G network. DFA is confident its network will contribute to meeting South Africa’s 5G needs.

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DFA

DFA is the premier open-access fibre infrastructure and connectivity provider in South Africa. We finance, build, install, manage, and maintain a world-class fibre network to transmit metro and long-haul telecommunications traffic. We started rolling out our fibre network in 2007, and to date, we have deployed over 13,000 km of ducting infrastructure in major metros, secondary cities, and smaller towns. We have now also expanded our operations into Zimbabwe. Our network runs with an industry-leading uptime of 99.98%. We lease our secure transmission and backbone fibre infrastructure and provide associated connectivity services to telecommunications operators, Internet service providers, media conglomerates, tertiary education institutions, municipalities, government organizations, and other businesses, large and small, on equal terms.

Editorial contacts

Fiki Masilela
Dark Fibre Africa
(+27) 83 618 5354
Fiki.Masilela@dfafrica.co.za