CHINA has reportedly taken a major step forward in its internet infrastructure with the launch of its first commercial 10-Gigabit (10G) broadband network in Sunan County, Hebei Province.
The ambitious project, a collaboration between telecommunications giant Huawei and state-owned operator China Unicom, promises to provide dramatically faster internet access.
According to The Economic Times, official specifications for the service target download speeds of up to 9,834 Megabits per second (Mbps)—just shy of 10 Gigabits per second (Gbps)—with upload speeds around 1,008 Mbps and network latency as low as 3 milliseconds.
The ultra-fast network employs next-generation 50G Passive Optical Network (PON) technology, which enhances data transmission over existing fibre-optic infrastructure.
To put this into perspective, downloading a 20GB 4K movie, which might take 7-10 minutes on a typical 1Gbps connection, could be completed in under 20 seconds on the new 10G service.
This leap in speed makes it easier to handle high-bandwidth applications such as cloud computing, immersive virtual and augmented reality (VR/AR) experiences, 8K video streaming, and complex smart home systems.
China’s new 10G deployment positions the country ahead of other leading nations, such as the UAE and Qatar, in terms of commercially available broadband speeds.
The rollout is expected to drive innovation across various sectors, including telemedicine, remote education, and data-intensive smart agriculture, by enabling faster and more reliable data transmission. - April 27, 2025