Looking ahead: 5G standalone still pretty lonely

Mike Dano, Light Reading

December 19, 2023

3 Min Read
Looking ahead: 5G standalone still pretty lonely

5G non-standalone (NSA) is the first iteration of the networking technology. It essentially requires a 4G core network to serve as an anchor for a new 5G radio access network (RAN). According to one estimate, 5G NSA is now supporting over a billion subscribers worldwide.

But the next iteration of 5G technology known as 5G standalone (SA) isn’t faring as well. While 5G SA eliminates the need for a 4G anchor network and supports technologies like Voice over 5G New Radio (VoNR) and network slicing, it has proven difficult to deploy.

Status of 5G SA deployment

“Reliance Jio, China Telecom-Macau and Globe Telecom came to the rescue in the fourth quarter to push 2022 over 2021 for the number of 5G SA eMMB [Enhanced Mobile Broadband] networks launched,” wrote Dave Bolan, research director at Dell’Oro Group.

Earlier this year, the firm counted only 39 operators internationally that have deployed 5G SA. “This was a disappointment in contrast with over 200 5G non-standalone (5G NSA) networks and over 700 LTE networks that could be implementing 5G SA networks,” Bolan wrote.

T-Mobile in the US was one of the first big operators to launch 5G SA, and others including Dish Network, Telefónica and KDDI have done so since. But other network operators have explained why it is not an easy shift.

“The reason it is taking quite a while to roll out the 5G [SA] core is that’s a sea change in the underlying infrastructure,” BT CTO Howard Watson said last year.

Meanwhile, Verizon’s networking chief, Joe Russo, had this to say about his company’s ongoing SA 5G delay: “It is absolutely a capability that we think will be another enabler to new use cases. But … the reliability and performance of Verizon’s network is what we stand for, and I don’t put technology out into the network that is a step back. It has to be a step forward. And all of the data that I see – both internal testing and with external testing that happens out there in the market – tells me that SA [standalone] needs a little bit more time.”

VoNR rolls out slowly

Voice calling appears to be an afterthought in the world of 5G. On most 5G NSA networks, voice calling remains squarely relegated to 4G.

5G SA opens up the potential to run voice calls over 5G, but some of the companies early to deploy the technology have moved slowly toward VoNR. AT&T was still testing the technology in May, for example, while T-Mobile slowly expanded its VoNR services after launching 5G SA in 2020.

To read the complete article, visit Light Reading.

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