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5G as a Social Infrastructure Chaesub LEE, Director, ITU

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Presentation on theme: "5G as a Social Infrastructure Chaesub LEE, Director, ITU"— Presentation transcript:

1 5G as a Social Infrastructure Chaesub LEE, Director, ITU
e-Services Industry 4.0 Smart Mobility Smart City

2 The UN specialized agency for ICT
What we do Allocation of radiofrequency spectrum and satellite orbits Bridging the digital divide The UN specialized agency for ICT Establishing international standards

3 ITU membership 700+ Unique in the UN system as the only body to include the private sector Unique in the ICT standards world as the only body to include governments 193 150+ MEMBER STATES PRIVATE-SECTOR ENTITIES ACADEMIA

4 Society Developments & ICTs (1)
Provide Infrastructural Connectivity GII: Global Information Infrastructure Information Super Highway Smart Phone: Smart ICTs Provide Mobility (Broadband, Mobile) Connecting the people: Mobile Connect the world Seamless Life Provide Connected Life Connecting the Things ??? Connecting the Objects

5 Creating value with IoT: A Game Changer (1)
Smart Cities IoT for urban and spatial planning Smart Learning Internet of living things Smart Manufacturing Smart waste collection and consumption monitoring Quality checks and maintenance using cameras and sensors Cloud computing for supply chain management Intelligent Transport Systems Fuel leak wireless detection systems Real-time traffic management Parking monitoring Icons adapted from fontawesome.com

6 Creating value with IoT: A Game Changer (2)
Smart Agriculture Smart greenhouse Soil monitoring sensors Smart irrigation sprinkler controllers Smart Building IoT-based smart grid IoT-enabled security Secure remote health monitoring Smart Water Management Smart water meters Water quality monitoring with IoT sensors IoT rainwater harvesting systems Icons adapted from fontawesome.com

7 Society Developments & ICTs (2)
GII: Global Information Infrastructure Information Super Highway Provide Infrastructural Connectivity Integrated Network Hyper-Connected Network Smart Trustworthy Network Provide Mobility (Broadband, Mobile) Connecting the people: Mobile Connect the world Mass Connectivity Micro Connectivity Seamless Connectivity Reliable Connectivity Seamless Life Connecting the Things Provide Connected Life Connecting the Objects ??? Smart Phone: Smart ICTs

8 Key Features of 5G Service Features Performance Features

9 Usage scenarios (1) Massive machine type communications
Very large number of connected devices, typically transmitting a relatively low volume of non-delay-sensitive data Devices are required to be low-cost, with very long battery life Smart wearables, sensor networks, mobile video surveillance…

10 Usage scenarios (2) Ultra-reliable and low latency communications
Stringent requirements for capabilities such as throughput, latency and availability Wireless control of industrial manufacturing or production processes, remote medical surgery, distribution automation in the smart grid, transportation safety… Extreme real-time applications: Tactile Internet (1ms e2e latency) Automated driving and traffic control, collaborative robots, life-critical e-health applications, 3D connectivity for drones, advanced public-safety applications…

11 Usage scenarios (3) Enhanced Mobile Broadband
Hotspots: High user density - very high traffic capacity Pervasive video, smart office, operator cloud services, intensive HD video/photo sharing… Wide-area coverage: Seamless coverage and medium-to-high mobility 50+ Mbps everywhere; ultra-low cost networks High user mobility: high-speed train, remote computing, moving hotspots, 3D connectivity for aircraft…

12 Performance targets (1)
Peak data rate The peak data rate of 5G for enhanced Mobile Broadband is expected to reach 10 Gbit/s However, under certain conditions and scenarios, 5G would support up to 20 Gbit/s peak data rate Hotspots: User-experienced data rate is expected to reach higher values (e.g. 1 Gbit/s indoor) Wide-area coverage (e.g. in urban and suburban areas): User- experienced data rate of 100 Mbit/s is expected to be enabled

13 Performance targets (2)
Spectrum efficiency 3x higher than 4G for enhanced Mobile Broadband The achievable increase in efficiency from 4G will vary between scenarios and could be higher in some scenarios (e.g. 5x, subject to further research) 5G is expected to support 10 Mbit/s/m2 area traffic capacity, e.g. in hotspots

14 Performance targets (3)
Energy consumption Energy consumption for the 5G radio access network should not be greater than IMT networks deployed today, while delivering the enhanced capabilities Network energy efficiency should therefore be improved by a factor at least as great as the envisaged traffic capacity increase of 5G relative to 4G for enhanced Mobile Broadband

15 Performance targets (4)
Low latency and high mobility 5G would be able to provide 1ms over-the-air latency, capable of supporting services with very low latency requirements 5G is also expected to enable high mobility up to 500 km/h with acceptable QoS (e.g. high-speed trains) Connection density 5G is expected to support a connection density of up to 106/km2, e.g. in massive machine type communication scenarios

16 Summary: 5G as a Social Infrastructure
Connected Cars, Intelligent Traffic Systems, Automatic Driving/Drone Smart Sustainable City / Village / Community / Islands with IoT e/m-health, e/m-education and e- farming with Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality Waste/water management, early warning and disaster relief Integrated platform for Mobile and Fixed Telephony, Broadband and Internet 5G/ IMT2020

17 Stakeholder Accountability
Summary: 5G as a SDG Enabler Universality 17 Goals Stakeholder Accountability 169 indicators Inclusivity 15 years

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