Business

China’s Huawei scores 4G patent deal for Volkswagen cars

This comes as company moves into new sectors after US sanctions risk its traditional business lines

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 08 Jul 2021 7:30AM

China’s Huawei scores 4G patent deal for Volkswagen cars
Huawei, the world’s largest supplier of telecom networking gear and formerly a top-three smartphone supplier, has pivoted to other business segments for survival, following US sanctions. – AFP pic, July 8, 2021

SHANGHAI – Huawei has struck a licensing deal that will allow use of its 4G technologies in connected vehicles manufactured by Volkswagen (VW) Group, said the Chinese tech giant yesterday.

The deal is its largest yet in the automotive industry, it added.

It comes as the company moves aggressively into intelligent vehicles and other new sectors after the United States (US) sanctions imperilled its traditional network equipment and smartphone business lines.

Huawei did not provide financial terms or identify the VW supplier, but said the agreement included a licence under its 4G patents, which covers Volkswagen vehicles equipped with wireless connectivity.

VW in a statement said: “We welcome that a leading ICT (Information Communication Technology) company has granted one of our suppliers a license to standard-essential mobile communications patents.”

“This licensing in the supply chain is a model of how the increasingly close cooperation between the mobility industry and information and communications industry can succeed.”

Branding Huawei a security threat, the US has barred the company from the huge American market, cut it off from global supply chains, and pressured allies to ban or remove Huawei gear from their national telecoms systems.

Huawei has denied the accusation, and said no supporting evidence has ever been provided by the US.

In response, the firm, the world’s largest supplier of telecom networking gear and formerly a top-three smartphone supplier, has pivoted to other business segments for survival.

Besides supplying technologies to manufacturers of intelligent cars, it has tipped plans to move into the software sector, as well as enterprise and cloud computing.

Last month it also launched its own home-grown mobile operating system, after US sanctions barred it from using Google’s Android system on its smartphones. – AFP, July 8, 2021

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