Telecoms service providers: 4G will still dominate from now to 2030
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The 4G coverage of the Viettel Military Industry and Telecommunications Group now reaches more than 95% of the population. |
4G remains dominant technology to 2030
The Ministry of Information and Communications (MIC) cited the Groupe Speciale Mobile Association (GSMA) and Ericsson as predicting that 4G will remain the dominant technology with the majority of subscribers, 55%, to 2025. It will retain this position until 2028, with 50%, and the proportion will gradually decrease when 5G starts to dominate.
Given this, after auctioning three frequency bands for telecoms service providers to deploy 4G and 5G networks, the MIC has continued to allocate the 880-915 MHz and 925-960 MHz frequency bands for these two technologies. Meanwhile, the 900Mhz band is licensed for four operators - Vietnamobile, VNPT, Viettel and MobiFone – to run 2G/3G/4G.
Minister of Information and Communications Nguyen Manh Hung said 2024 is a year of 5G commercialisation nationwide, but operators still have to invest in 4G infrastructure, which will be important for at least the next five years.
4G will still dominate from now to 2030, and it is not until at least 2029 that 5G could surpass 4G in terms of data traffic and subscribers, he said.
Concurrent investment in 5G and 4G
The 4G coverage of the Viettel Military Industry and Telecommunications Group now reaches more than 95% of the population. Over the past year, the firm has installed 6,000 new 4G base stations, upgraded bandwidth, and increased the capacity of 53,000 other 4G stations, ensuring access to this network for over 4 million people in remote areas as 2G was shut down.
At present, the number of Viettel’s 4G stations accounts for about 40% of such facilities across Vietnam.
Viettel targets its 4G coverage equivalent to that of 2G, to about 98% of the population, by 2025. It plans to build an additional 7,000 new 4G new stations in the time ahead while continuing to promote bandwidth and capacity of existing facilities to improve service quality as subscribers increase.
Nguyen Thi Tam, Deputy General Director of the Viettel Networks Corporation – a subsidiary of Viettel, said the firm is simultaneously working on 5G and 4G technologies. Previously, it reduced investment in 3G when developing 4G. However, Viettel will still spend big on 4G as it still has a crucial role to play to counteract network challenges posed by the 2G shutdown in rural areas.
Likewise, the Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT) will keep investing in 4G alongside commercialising 5G and researching the 6G technology. It hopes to expand the 4G and 5G coverage to 98% of the population by 2025, with a download speed of 40Mb/s for 4G and 100Mb/s for 5G.
Do Manh Dung, acting director of the individual customers division at VinaPhone – a subsidiary of VNPT, said the group has been striving to expand the 4G network since larger coverage will enable customers to access digital services.
The MobiFone Corporation is also set to build about 4,000 more 4G base stations next year to enlarge the network.
Nguyen Dinh Dung, deputy head of the telecoms services division of MobiFone, noted the company identified investment in 4G as one of its tasks because the 2G network has been shut down, and if customers are unable to access 4G services, they will file complaints and even switch to other service providers.
Deputy Director of the MIC’s Authority of Telecommunications Nguyen Phong Nha said that as 2G services close and 3G is about to follow the same roadmap, 4G is now the most important telecoms service network for providers. To ensure service quality and meet increasing consumer demand, they must continuously invest in 4G.