UK, US, Others Sign Telecoms Pact

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Five countries have issued a statement on greater collaboration on telecoms matters, the main areas of which appear to be Open RAN, 6G, and China related security concerns.

 

According to Telecoms.com, The Global Coalition on Telecommunications is a sync-up between individual government departments with telecoms in their remit – namely the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology in the UK, the Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts in Australia, the Department of Innovation, Science and Economic Development in Canada, the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications in Japan and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration in the US.

 

The goal of the collaboration is to make sure countries involved are all on the same page with regard to policies relating to current and future telecoms technology.

 

What this means in practice is that a GCOT steering group is expected to meet twice per year, with one in-person and one virtual meeting every six months, to discuss the listed areas of corporation, the scope of which includes information sharing, joint R&D, funding alignment, the development of standards, skills, supply chain diversification, security, and 6G.

 

Ensuring the security, resilience, and innovation of telecommunications networks is a global issue. The international community needs to work together to foster diverse supply chains, secure and interoperable standards, and innovation – including for the development of future telecommunications technologies such as 6G,” reads the announcement.

 

With regards to sharing information, the most achievable thing for such a group to commence with, the release states:

 

We plan to use the GCOT as a forum to exchange information on our respective policy approaches to telecommunications including telecommunications supplier diversity, future telecommunications, and related security considerations. We also plan to encourage information sharing between our respective testing and research facilities whilst exploring opportunities to reduce challenges around sharing of research and intellectual property management. We further intend to inform the GCOT’s efforts through meaningful engagement with industry stakeholders and to promote sharing of relevant information directly between these actors as they deem appropriate.”

 

 

Punch/ Oyeniyi Oyenike

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