As of January 1, 2010, the European Union will invest €18 million into research that will underpin next generation 4G mobile networks.

The European Commission just decided to start the process of funding research on Long Term Evolution Advanced technology, that will offer mobile internet speeds up to a hundred times faster than current 3G networks. LTE is becoming the industry's first choice for next generation mobile networks, also thanks to substantial EU research funding since 2004.

The Commission said 25 years ago Europe already made the GSM standard the backbone of modern mobile telephony. Based on Europe's joint research and the strength of the EU's single market, the GSM standard is today used by 80 per cent of the world's mobile networks. LTE promises to be a similar success.

Long Term Evolution is the latest wireless technology, providing mobile internet speeds of up to 100 megabits per second, 10 times faster than 3G mobile networks. In Europe, it is currently being trialled by mobile operators in Finland, Germany, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the UK and is expected to be commercially available in Sweden and Norway in the first half of 2010.

Between 2004 and 2007, the EU supported research on optimisation and standardisation of LTE (the Winner I and II projects, run by a consortium of 41 leading European companies and universities) with €25 million. This led to the development of the first concept for an LTE-based network infrastructure.

Last month, the European Commission decided to start investing a further €18 million into research on the enhanced version of LTE, LTE Advanced. In September, the Commission will start to negotiate the details with project consortia, including the flagship ARTIST4G that builds on the achievements of the WINNER projects and unites 4G industry and researchers from Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the UK. The new projects are expected to start in January 2010.

The European Commission sees strong potential in the deployment of LTE and LTE Advanced technology. LTE will, among other benefits, boost the capacities of network operators; it will propel mobile broadband speeds up to 1 gigabit (thousand megabits) per second, allowing users on the go to fully benefit from sophisticated online services such as high quality TV or video on demand; it will use radio spectrum more efficiently; and it could bring mobile broadband to less populated regions and contribute to the reduction of the "digital divide" between rural and urban areas.

The Commission said leading mobile operators and manufacturers around the world such as Orange, TeliaSonera, T-Mobile, AT&T, NTT-DoCoMo, Verizon, Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson, Huawei and Nokia Siemens Networks have already committed to using the LTE standard. By 2013, operators worldwide are expected to invest nearly €6 billion ($ 8.6 billion) in LTE equipment, according to market analysts.

Overall, in 2007-2013 the EU will invest more than €700 million into research on future networks, half of which will be allocated to wireless technologies contributing to development of 4G and beyond 4G networks.

http://cordis.europa.eu/fp7/ict/future-networks/

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