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MWC Shanghai, shown here in June 2019, returns this month with a sharpened focus on 5G transformation in China, the telecommunications industry’s largest 5G market. Photo: Visual China Group via Getty Images

MWC Shanghai returns as in-person event after 2-year pandemic hiatus as telecoms sector sharpens focus on 5G, internet, augmented reality

  • This year’s event will focus on three main areas: 5G transformation, the Internet of Things and augmented reality
  • That focus at MWC Shanghai underscores the importance of next-generation mobile network development in China
MWC Shanghai, the regional edition of the world’s largest mobile communications industry trade show, returns as in-person event on Wednesday after a two-year hiatus owing to previous strict Covid-19 restrictions in China.
This year’s event, which will run from June 28 to 30 at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre, will be held under the theme of “Velocity” and focus on three main areas: 5G transformation, the Internet of Things (IoT) and augmented reality (AR), according to London-based organiser the GSM Association, which represents the interests of mobile network operators worldwide.

This year marks not only the first decade in China for MWC Shanghai, but also the event’s “grand and comprehensive” offline return since the outbreak of the pandemic in 2020, said Sihan Bo Chen, GSMA’s head of Greater China, at a press conference on Sunday.

“The most significant transformation witnessed over the past decade has been the [mobile communications] industry’s transition from 4G to the 5G era,” she said, adding that the next-generation mobile technology is expected to become fully mainstream in various countries by 2030.

People walk past a sign of this year’s edition of MWC Barcelona, the flagship annual mobile industry trade show organised by the GSM Association, during its opening on February 27, 2023, in Spain. Photo: Xinhua

MWC Shanghai’s offline return follows the GMA Association’s successful staging of flagship annual trade show MWC Barcelona as an in-person event from February 27 to March 2 this year in Spain.

The event last year was cancelled because of rigid Covid-19 control measures imposed on the metropolis, home to a population of 26 million. Its 2021 edition was held in February, following a break in 2020 as the global pandemic started, with 17,500 attendees offline and more than 7,000 visitors online.

This year’s theme at MWC Shanghai underscores the importance of next-generation mobile network development in China, which already has the telecommunications industry’s largest 5G infrastructure and remains the world’s biggest smartphone market.
China had already surpassed 60 per cent of the world’s total 5G connections by the end of last year, despite a tech war with the United States. China’s 5G connections are expected to reach 1.6 billion by 2030, accounting for nearly one-third of the global total, according to the latest market report released by the GSM Association.
Visitors of event organiser the GSM Association get a preview of exhibits at MWC Shanghai, the regional edition of the world’s largest mobile communications industry trade show, which will return as an in-person event from June 28 to 30, 2023, at the Shanghai New International Expo Centre. Photo: Weibo

China started its commercial deployment of 5G mobile services in June 2019. As of March this year, the number of 5G base stations in the country has surpassed 2.64 million, with service coverage extended to all of the nation’s counties.

Shanghai aims to install 70,000 5G base stations by 2025, while achieving a fixed broadband access bandwidth of 500 megabits per second, according to the city’s Five-Year blueprint released in 2021.
China’s leading personal computer and server maker Lenovo Group is the largest exhibitor at MWC Shanghai this year, according to GSM Association’s Chen, as the company is “undergoing its own digital transformation and upgrading in the era of 5G”.

China unveils grand digital plan powered by 5G, IoT and supercomputing

The show’s 300 exhibitors include telecoms industry giants China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom, as well as foreign companies such as US tech firm Qualcomm and Sweden’s Ericsson.
There are more than 200 company executives and industry experts expected to deliver speeches at MWC Shanghai, including Huawei Technologies Co deputy chairwoman, rotating chairwoman and chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou.
This year’s event will feature for the first time a “Digital Shanghai Zone” that will showcase the city’s achievements in innovative digital infrastructure development powered by 5G, including artificial intelligence, IoT, AR and virtual reality.

The GSM Association’s Chen said these innovations are now empowering various sectors, from healthcare to manufacturing, which could turn the city into a global benchmark for 5G transformation.

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