Nokia has signed a 1.36-billion-euro
($1.53 billion) frame agreement with
China Mobile to create a “cloud network”
for the Chinese operator, the Finnish
telecom equipment giant said Monday.
The deal would entail “seamless
connectivity that will more efficiently
meet the ever-growing data demands of
its subscriber base,” Nokia said in a
statement.
Nokia is to deliver a new type of base
station which allows the use of multiple
radio technologies simultaneously and is
scalable to support all connection speeds
from the oldest to the upcoming, ultra-
fast 5G networks and connected objects.
China Mobile is the world’s largest
mobile operator and one of three public
operators in the Chinese market.
Nokia, the world’s former number one in
handsets, now concentrates on network
equipment.
The deal was signed in Beijing at the
Sino-German Economic Forum by Li
Huidi, China Mobile’s Vice President, and
Hans-Juergen Bill, head of Nokia
Networks in Germany, while German
Chancellor Angela Merkel and China’s
Prime Minister Li Keqiang present.
It “strengthens Nokia’s position as a
leading provider of next-generation
technologies in China,” said Nokia’s Mike
Wang who leads operations in China.
Listed both in the Hong Kong and New
York stock exchanges, China Mobile had
around 835 million mobile clients in
April.
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