
Huawei highlights Middle East's strategic role in next-generation mobile communications at MWC Shanghai 2026
Rashad Iskandrni
With U6GHz entering commercial deployment in 2026, the Middle East is set to lead the next chapter of 5G-Advanced on the Upper 6 GHz band
Dubai, United Arab Emirates, June 25, 2026: Huawei, a global leader in information and communications
technology (ICT) infrastructure and smart devices, set out its vision for the
next decade of mobile communications at Mobile World Congress (MWC) Shanghai
2026, while highlighting the Middle East's growing strategic role as the
industry transitions toward AI-native networks and a new era of token-based
connectivity.
Held under the theme "Advancing All Intelligence," MWC
Shanghai 2026 brings together global carriers, industry partners and key
opinion leaders to explore enhanced connectivity and compute, 5G-A high uplink
and experience monetization, and AI-powered business upgrade.
At the event, David Wang, Huawei's Deputy Chairman of the Board and
Rotating Chairman, delivered a keynote address on how AI is reshaping the
economics of mobile communications and setting the direction for the next
decade of industry growth.
On spectrum, Wang said securing the right frequency resources is
essential to delivering the performance that AI-driven services will require.
The U6GHz band, the most strategically important slice of spectrum for the next
phase of mobile communications, has already been formally designated for
International Mobile Telecommunications (IMT) by more than 20 countries and
regions, covering nearly 80% of the global population. He said operators will
need to secure continuous bandwidths of 200 MHz to 400 MHz or more to deliver
capabilities including five times downlink, ten times uplink, and low-latency,
high-reliability performance.
In his keynote, Wang said that AI is fundamentally changing what
mobile networks must be capable of delivering, and that the decisions operators
and governments make in the next 12 to 18 months will determine who leads and
who follows in the global race toward intelligent connectivity. "With each
generation, we have pushed the limits of spectral efficiency and performance. This
has consistently expanded the boundaries of communications, helping carriers
translate network capabilities into commercial value," Wang said.
He cited Huawei projections showing that the number of AI agents
operating worldwide is expected to exceed 100 billion by 2030 and could reach
the trillions by 2040. In the most densely connected urban environments, agent
density is projected to surpass 10 million per square kilometer. Wang noted
that global 5G subscribers have already crossed 3.1 billion, and that China's
5G-Advanced user base alone has surpassed 110 million. The imperative for the
industry, he added, is to ensure that mobile networks evolve at a pace that
matches the demands AI will place upon them.
Token Economy, Innovations and Real-World Applications
At MWC Shanghai 2026, Huawei introduced its concept of the token
economy, where tokens, the fundamental unit of output in large language models
and AI services, are becoming the new measure of value in mobile
communications. As AI agents become embedded across industries, Huawei said
supporting token production, transmission and consumption at scale is rapidly
becoming a core network differentiator for operators.
Huawei unveiled its AI-centric target network at the event alongside
China's three major carriers. The architecture is built across three integrated
layers: a communications network designed for real-time interaction rather than
traffic throughput; a computing network in which access to the network becomes
functionally equivalent to access to computing resources; and an AI computing
infrastructure anchored by Huawei's SuperPoDs, designed for high-efficiency
token production with open-source compatibility and a storage-compute
integration that the company said reduces cost per token and improves output
per watt.
High Uplink: A Critical Capability for the AI Era
Huawei highlighted uplink performance as one of the most critical
technical requirements of the AI era. Mobile networks have historically been
designed to prioritize downlink capacity, reflecting the consumption-heavy
patterns of video streaming and browsing. AI-driven applications are changing
that equation significantly. AI glasses already in use for real-time
translation and visual assistance require 20 Mbps of uplink throughput. As
multimodal AI applications continue to scale, Huawei said that 1 Gbps peak
uplink capacity and 20 Mbps as a universal uplink baseline are becoming the new
benchmarks that operators must plan around.
AI-Native Networks in Action
The transformative potential of AI-native networks is already being
demonstrated across multiple industries. In Singapore, Singtel's deployment of
agentic AI in customer operations saw its AI assistant handle more than 70,000
customer interactions in six weeks, with 70% of routine queries resolved
without human involvement, freeing employees to focus on higher-value and more
complex customer needs.
In China, firefighting robots equipped with 5G-Advanced modules are
operating on the frontline of emergency response, using China Mobile's network
to stream real-time thermal imagery to cloud-based AI systems that support fire
source localization, remote piloting and autonomous execution in complex
scenarios.
In logistics, AI agent networks have demonstrated the ability to cut
shipment delays by 15% by replanning delivery routes in real time during
weather disruptions, processing hundreds of route alternatives in seconds. In
the consumer segment, Huawei's Celia assistant is recording three billion daily
activations, reflecting a 4.5-fold increase in agent distribution and
illustrating the scale of AI interaction that next-generation networks will be
required to support.
A Spectrum Opportunity with Regional Significance
With the Middle East expected to be the first region in the world to
deploy a commercial 5G-Advanced network running on U6 GHz, and selected
carriers in Hong Kong and Macao of China also set to begin commercial
deployment later this year, Huawei sees the region as uniquely positioned to
lead the next phase of global mobile communications.
For operators across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and the
wider Middle East, Huawei believes this represents a significant strategic
opportunity. Carriers in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and neighboring markets have
been among the most progressive globally in deploying advanced 5G networks, and
U6 GHz would enable them to unlock substantially higher bandwidth to support
the real-time, AI-driven applications that are placing increasing demands on
uplink capacity.
A Vision for 2035
At the concurrent Mobile Broadband Forum (MBBF) Top Talk Summit,
held in Shanghai on June 23 and attended by 150 industry figures including
mobile telecom operators, AI ecosystem leaders, industry organization
representatives and leading academics, Li Peng, Huawei's Director of the Board
and President of ICT Sales and Service, set out the company's longer-term
vision for the decade ahead.
"By 2035, we'll have co-created an Agentverse defined by
carbon-silicon symbiosis, virtual-real integration, and agent
collaboration," Li Peng said. "Intelligent connectivity can break new
boundaries; technological innovation can open the door to new network
capabilities; and the intelligent economy can unlock new value in connectivity.
Together, we can achieve symbiosis with AI, advance with AI, and succeed with
AI."
Li Peng concluded by inviting global carriers and industry partners
to collaborate with Huawei in building what he called a Mobile AI City, and in
shaping the next decade of mobile communications.
Framework for Mobile Communications Governance
Huawei is committed to play a central role in shaping the 3GPP
Release 21, the standards framework that will govern mobile communications from
2030 to 2040, which is expected to launch in March 2027. The company will work
closely with carriers, industry partners and governments to translate the
priorities outlined at MWC Shanghai into practical progress.
As the ICT industry moves rapidly toward an era of token
monetization, Huawei is working with global carriers and partners to explore
5G-A high uplink and experience monetization, as well as AI-powered business
upgrade, through enhanced connectivity and compute.
MWC Shanghai 2026 takes place from June 24 to 26 in Shanghai, China.
During the event, Huawei is showcasing its latest products and solutions in
Hall N1 of the Shanghai New International Expo Center (SNIEC).
For more information, please visit: https://carrier.huawei.com/minisite/mwcs2026/en/
XX
ENDS XX
About Huawei
Founded in 1987, Huawei is a leading
global provider of information and communications technology (ICT)
infrastructure and smart devices. We have approximately 213,000
employees, and we operate in more than 170 countries and regions, serving
more than three billion people around the world.
Our vision and
mission is to bring digital to every person, home and
organization for a fully connected, intelligent world. To this end, we will
drive ubiquitous connectivity and promote equal access to networks; bring cloud
and artificial intelligence to all four corners of the earth to provide
superior computing power where you need it, when you need it; build digital
platforms to help all industries and organizations become more agile,
efficient, and dynamic; redefine user experience with AI, making it more
personalized for people in all aspects of their life, whether they're at home,
in the office, or on the go.
For more information, please visit Huawei online at:
or follow us on:
http://www.linkedin.com/company/Huawei
http://www.facebook.com/Huawei
Middle East:
https://www.facebook.com/HuaweiTechME

.jpeg)

.jpeg)




