HomeNewsBT and Nokia trial Open RAN solution in the city of Hull

BT and Nokia trial Open RAN solution in the city of Hull

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BT has been working on Open RAN although it didnโ€™t join the Open RAN fan club with Orange, Telefonica, TIM and Vodafone

BT said it has โ€œunderlined its ongoing commitment to the development and deployment of Open RAN technologyโ€, announcing details of a trial with Nokia.

The trial is to take place in the city of Hull in the north-east of England (pictured). The operator will install Nokiaโ€™s RAN Intelligent Controller (RIC) for Open RAN, across a number of sites, to optimise network performance for customers on its mobile network, EE.

Getting a shift on

Despite keeping a relatively low profile on Open RAN, in contrast to five of its mainland Europe counterparts, it said it is interested in โ€œsustained investment in all technologies that deliver the best possible customer experience, including using open architecture wherever network performance can be enhancedโ€.

BT said it will develop Open RAN its vendor partners โ€œto ensure it becomes a viable, mature, scale option for network optimisation as soon as possibleโ€.

In addition to the Hull trial, the operator will  open a dedicated Open RAN Innovation Centre at its Adastral Park facility, close to the city of Ipswich in East Anglia later this year.

The idea is to provide opportunities for large and small vendors to develop and prove their equipment and provide a platform for open architecture progress across all network elements.

All about CX

Neil McRae, Chief Architect, BT, commented, โ€œOur Open RAN trial with Nokia is one of many investments we are making to boost the performance of our market-leading 4G and 5G EE network and deliver an even better service to our customers.

โ€œOur high performance, high efficiency radio access equipment, provided by the major global vendors, has enabled us to roll-out 4G and now 5G at scale, with the confidence that our customers will get the best network experience possible.โ€