Digital connectivity

China’s government has long considered the internet essential infrastructure to upgrade its industry, boost competitiveness and for potential military uses. A combination of industrial policy, protectionism and entrepreneurship have led to the establishment of important telecommunications companies – chief among them, Huawei.  

China was an early mover in 5G, currently the most modern mobile connection to the internet. Huawei and ZTE took part in early standardization meetings on 5G, and China deployed 5G in 2018, before most Western countries started their roll-out. Huawei’s technology rivals that of established equipment suppliers Nokia and Ericsson and is usually cheaper. 

Now, the world is watching 6G, for which 2025 will be an important year. Huawei is already set to play an important role in this future key technology.

China’s strategy of building infrastructure first, assuming demand will follow, has worked very well especially in mobile and broadband internet. In disruptive internet technologies, this strategy is not possible. For instance, Chinese companies still trail the US satellite internet provider Starlink, which pioneered low Earth orbit (LEO), high-bandwidth satellite internet. China launched the first satellites in 2024 for Qianfan, an eventual globe-spanning internet network to rival Starlink, one of three networks intended to be operational in China by 2025.

Other technologies have seen less innovation in recent years but are still a focus of US-China tech competition. Submarine communications cables, for instance, have an average life cycle of 17 years, with recent innovation mostly focused on cost effectiveness. Since most traffic passes through submarine cables, both the US and China are wary about spying, and have thus competed for the location and control of many of these cables.   

Graphics dashboard

"Eastern Data, Western Computing" megaproject links up national resources

US export controls limit China’s access to hardware that can be used for computing. To deal with this scarcity through coordination, China’s government launched the National Integrated Computing Power network (NICPN). This is part of the “Eastern Data, Western Computing” plan that seeks to construct data centers in remote areas of China.

The EU and South Africa depend on Chinese digital connectivity equipment
The EU and South Africa depend on Chinese digital connectivity equipment

As Chinese companies like Huawei started producing digital connectivity products like base stations, switches and routers, some countries now rely on Chinese equipment. While the US and India have managed to decrease their dependencies on China, South Africa and the EU have seen a significant increase in their reliance on Chinese equipment. 

Digital Connectivity in China: Timeline of crucial events

Development
Policy/regulation

China's Big Three state-owned telecommunication operators (China Mobile, China Unicom and China Telecom) launch 5G networks in China, almost nine months before the launch of 5G in Europe.

China establishes the SOE China Satellite Network Group (SatNet) to drive the internet satellite megaconstellation GuoWang (China Satellite Network), China's state megaproject for satellite internet.

NDRC launches "Eastern data, Western computing" megaproject to make China’s computing power infrastructure more efficient &sustainable, moving data processing to inland provinces with cheaper land.

Huawei presents 5G-Advanced (also called 5.5G) at the Mobile Broadband Forum in Doha. 5G-A is an innovation between 5G and 6G. Huawei was the first to develop a complete product portfolio for 5.5G.

National Research Centre of Parallel Computer Engineering and Technology (Wuxi) discloses details on supercomputer Sunway OceanLight, built despite US sanctions, may be one of three exascale machines.

China Mobile conducts the world's first low earth orbit (LEO) satellite test using 6G technology, driving forward its plans for an integrated terrestrial-space network with high speed and low latency.

A team from Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications says it has built the world's first 6G field test network, an important step toward commercialization which Beijing wants by 2030.

China submits two spectrum allocation filings to the UN’s International Telecommunication Union (ITU), revealing plans for a megaconstellation of ca. 13,000 internet satellites.

The powerful Central Commission for Cybersecurity and Informatization publishes Beijing’s most important strategic blueprint for the digital transformation, the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025).

Second Institute of China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporation (CASIC) tests real-time wireless transmission using terahertz technology, important for 6G achieving 100Gbps on a 10GHz bandwith.

Details emerge about the supercomputer Tianhe Xingyi (Tianhe-3), developed by the National University of Defense Technology despite US export restrictions. May be it is the world's most powerful.

China has 3.2 million 5G base stations, 87 percent of the goal set in the 14th FYP. At the end of 2021, the EU-27 had only 256,000 base stations, according to the EU's 5G Observatory.

Shanghai Lanjian Hongqing Technology Company (link to private rocket maker Landsoft) files with ITU to launch Honghu-III, a network of 10,000 satellites, might be the third Chinese megaconstellation.

Recent developments

Tech progress

  • German software giant SAP’s announcement that it will considerably downsize its China operations led to much discussion about opportunities for domestic software companies. Players like Inspur, Yonyou and Kingdee have been making gains, in part by riding the wave of AI (Source CN: NetEase
  • China launched another batch of communication satellites that will form part of the SpaceSail constellation, a planned network of 18,000 low-orbit broadband satellites and one of the country’s main responses to Elon Musk’s Starlink (Source CN: S&T Daily)
  • A team from Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications claims to have built the world's first 6G field network, integrating AI and communication China aims to commercialize 6G technology by 2030, with standards anticipated in 2025. (Source CN: S&T Daily
  • At the 2024 World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, Ant Group, launched its YinYu Cloud platform for privacy-preserving computing of large models. Data owners are so far hesitant to share their data with large models for fear of data leakage. (Source CN: Leiphone
  • Alibaba Cloud won First Prize in the 2023 China Association for Automation Science and Technology Progress Award for its ultra-large-scale cloud network technology. (Source CN: Leiphone
     

Domestic dynamics

  • The 2024 World Internet Conference took place in Wuzhen. The Cyberspace Administration of China published the “China Internet Development Report 2024” as well as the “World Internet Development Report 2024.” They report that China now has more than eight million rack-equivalent servers in data centers, a plus of 24.6 percent since 2023 (Source CN: ISC)
  • The influential Chinese Academy of Engineering and the China Information and Electronic Engineering Technology Development Strategy Research Center announced a list of 163 technologies aimed at reducing reliance on foreign technologies. The list is not readily available online – another sign of the growing secrecy surrounding China’s effort to break foreign “strangleholds.” (Source CN: CAEP)  
  • China is set to launch its G60 Starlink satellite constellation in early August, aiming to deploy 1,296 satellites initially and expand to over 14,000. This state-backed initiative seeks to provide global internet coverage including remote areas and compete with SpaceX's Starlink. (Source CN: 36kr
  • China's first nationwide survey on data resources, was released on May 24 at a digital economy summit in Fuzhou, Fujian province. The survey suggests that China is underutilizing its data, with less than 3% of data generated last year stored and processed. (Source EN: SCMP
     

Foreign involvement 

  • After being in the news for targeting telecommunication firms in the US, Chinese state-sponsored hacking group Salt Typhoon was linked to attacks targeting telcos in Southeast Asia. This shows the growing reach and sophistication of Chinese cyber espionage. (Source EN: Trend) 
  • Shenyang Sino-German Park hosted the 2024 Global Industrial Internet Conference where Sino-German industrial internet trends and innovations were discussed. The conference was led by Chinese local governments who view the internet as key for developing the region, traditionally focused on heavy industry. (Source CN: S&T Daily)
  • Alibaba Cloud announced investments in new, AI-focused data centers in South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Mexico, expanding its global network to 31 regions and 95 availability zones. Alibaba hopes to take a significant market share in the emerging AI cloud market in the Global South. (Source CN: S&T Daily
  • At the World Mobile Communications Conference in Shanghai in 2024, Huawei announced 5G-A an evolution of 5G, to enhance capabilities in speed, bandwidth, and latency, particularly in high-demand scenarios. (Source CN: 36 kr)

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