China’s Ministry and Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) recently made a major move around the development of the next-generation of mobile networks by approving trials in the 6GHz band for 6G technology.
IMT-2030 (6G), which is the government’s main coordinator for 6G development, authorised field trials for 6GHz spectrum in certain regions across China.
MIIT explained the move is aimed at advancing technical research, testing and validation based on “key scenarios and performance indicators”, defined by the ITU for 6G.
The move will further accelerate China’s push around 6G R&D, standardisation, industrialisation and to promote the sector, MIIT added.
China first allocated the use of 6GHz for 5G and 6G services in 2023, which was a world’s first at the time. It has however held back on approving trials until now.
The situation differs in both the US and Europe, where access to 6GHz is a contentious issue. The US opened up the band for Wi-FI use in 2020, while Europe is yet to decide on how to farm it out.
Operators in Europe have called on regulators to make the entire upper 6GHz band available for mobile services, arguing the move is necessary to ensure the region does not fall behind others in 6G development. However, players in the Wi-Fi industry are also seeking access.
As a mid-band spectrum, 6GHz is considered ideal for some of the use cases the ITU has identified for 6G including mass AI deployment, holographic communications and autonomous transport.
Source: Mobile World Live
Image Credit: Stock Image
Source: Tahawul Tech

