Germany launches 5G auction amid row with US over Huawei

AFP  |  Berlin 

launches its auction Tuesday for the construction of an ultra-fast mobile network as a transatlantic dispute rages over security concerns surrounding giant Chinese

Attempting to play down the row on Monday, Jochen Homann, of the (BNA), said: "No matter whether a supplier comes from or China, companies must meet certification requirements and security checks."

'5G' - 'fifth generation' - is the latest, high-speed generation of and will require winning bidders to offer service to at least 98 percent of German households, motorways and rail lines.

Germany, Europe's biggest economy whose rank 46th in the world for download speeds, wants to close the sizeable digital gap by making the shift to the ultra-fast system.

The BNA starts the auction in Mainz at 0900 GMT on Tuesday and the process will allocate 41 different frequency blocks.

Four operators are in the running, among them Germany's three main mobile network providers - Deutsche Telekom, and Telefonica (O2) - plus (1&1), a German company specialising in

Chinese firm is not one of the bidders but provides the four German companies with essential hardware - such as antennas and routers.

The US has accused of using Huawei's gear as a Trojan horse, forcing operators to transmit data to the regime, but has not provided evidence to support their suspicions.

Huawei has strenuously denied allegations its equipment could be used for espionage.

Chinese on Monday lashed out at what he called "abnormal, immoral" attacks on Huawei and demanded a "fair and just competition environment" for Chinese firms.

US-led attempts to encourage other nations to ban Huawei equipment from their suffered a setback when decided against imposing company specific-restrictions on the 5G auction.

US to last week warned that could stifle intelligence cooperation unless agreed a Huawei ban.

In a letter, Grenell told Peter Altmaier, Germany's economy minister, that intelligence-sharing cooperation could cease if Berlin allows the Chinese firm to be part of the

The threat escalated last week when NATO's in Europe, US Curtis Scaparrotti, warned Germany that NATO forces would cut communications if Berlin works with Huawei.

"We're concerned about their (Germany) backbone being compromised in the sense that, particularly with 5G, the bandwidth capability and ability to pull data is incredible," Scaparrotti told the last Wednesday.

"If it also is inside of their defence communications, then we're not gonna communicate with them.

"And for the military that would be a problem." Merkel has tried to reassure senior figures in by saying Germany would consult with the US over whether to use Huawei tech, but would "define our standards for ourselves".

However, (BND) shares some of the US fears.

BND security experts have asked the government to take China's overall strategy into account, including a law on forced cooperation in security matters, according to a report in magazine.

Other claim Berlin is drawing up a catalogue of measures, for all 5G providers, to change the laws.

These measures range from a non-espionage clause to the requirement of testing all components and the obligation to publish

In some cases, the government could insist equipment already installed is replaced, which could exclude Huawei from the infrastructure without pronouncing a formal ban on the Chinese firm, according to business daily

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, March 19 2019. 09:25 IST