3GPP Overview: The Standardization Ecosystem for Global Mobile Systems - Adrian Scrase, ETSI CTO, Head of 3GPP Mobile Competence Centre
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3GPP © 3GPP 2012Overview: The Standardization Ecosystem for Global Mobile Systems Adrian Scrase, ETSI CTO, Head of 3GPP Mobile Competence Centre 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 1
The Eco-system for Global Mobile Standards ITU-R/T Direct 3GPP Market Partners Requirements Cross reference Requirements via Member contributions Reference to 3GPP specs SDO Partners 5G Projects govern the project & transpose 3GPP Terminal certification specs locally based on 3GPP specs EU Japan Korea China North America India
The role of 3GPP 3GPP is part of the invention, proof of concept, standardization, trials, commercialization …cycle Its role is to specify and maintain a complete system description for mobile telecommunications The system description is characterized by a© 3GPP 2012 number of standardized interfaces, not a description of standardized deployment This standardization approach enables an interoperable, multi-vendor approach to (Graphic ©Qualcomm) deployment and generates mass market economies of scale, without stifling innovation 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 3
The 3GPP evolution path 3G / UMTS • Circuit Switched (CS) & Packet Switched (PS) Domains in parallel LTE • All IP • Mobile Broadband • Voice over LTE (IMS/VoLTE) © 3GPP 2012 LTE Advanced and LTE Advanced Pro • Paves the way for 5G • Cellular Internet of Things • Mission Critical Push To Talk • Dedicated Core Networks, Traffic Steering, ... 5G 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 4
Where are we now? 3GPP continues to expand the LTE platform to improve its efficiency to meet the mobile broadband demand © 3GPP 2012 3GPP is on schedule with the standardization of 5G, addressing the expanded connectivity needs of the future 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 5
A Global Partnership Project 3GPP Member companies participate via one or more of the Organizational Partners (OPs). Each OP is a recognized Standards Development Organization (SDO) from their country or region ARIB (Japan) ATIS (USA) CCSA (China) ETSI (Based in Europe, © 3GPP 2012 but global membership) TTA (Korea) TTC (Japan) TSDSI (India) Africa, Latin America, and Australia have no SDO present, so companies participate through one-of-the-above. 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 6
Member Participation Participation in 3GPP, 599 member organizations in 41 territories from: • Africa • Asia (especially China, India, Japan and Korea) • Australia • Greater Europe • North America © 3GPP 2012 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 7
But the 3GPP population is changing 3GPP Members now include, for example: • Advertising (e.g., Google) • Aerospace (e.g., Lockheed Martin, BAE) • Agricultural machinery manufacturers (e.g., John Deere, Husqvana) • Automotive manufactures (e.g, Volkswagen, Volvo, Toyota) • Broadcasting Community (e.g., EBU, BBC, TDF) • Energy Sector (e.g., Legrand) © 3GPP 2012 • Environment (e.g., Veolia) • Factory Automation companies (e.g., ABB, Siemens) • Public Safety (e.g., Dutch Police, UK Home Office, BDBOS, Firstnet) • Rail (e.g., International Union of Railways) • Retail Sector (e.g., Alibaba) • Satellite Community (e.g., ESO, Inmarsat) • Social Media (e.g., Facebook) Full listing available here: http://www.3gpp.org/about-3gpp/membership 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 8
Market Representation Partners • Market representation partners offer market advice to 3GPP and may bring into 3GPP a consensus view of market requirements (e.g., services, features and functionality) falling within the 3GPP scope. • 3GPP currently has 18 market representation partners: 5G Americas, Mobility Development Group © 3GPP 2012 5G Automotive Association, (formerly CDG), 5G Infrastructure Association, NGMN Alliance, Broadband India Forum, Public Safety Communication Cellular Operators Association Europe (PSCE) Forum, of India, Small Cell Forum, CTIA, The Critical Communications Global Certification Forum Association, Global mobile Suppliers TD Industry Alliance, Association, TD-Forum, GSMA, Wireless Broadband Alliance IPV6 Forum, 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 9
Project Coordination Group (PCG) TSG RAN TSG CT TSG SA Radio Access Network Core Network & Terminals Service & Systems Aspects RAN WG1 CT WG1 SA WG1 Radio Layer 1 spec MM/CC/SM (lu) Services RAN WG2 CT WG3 SA WG2 Radio Layer 2 spec Interworking with external Architecture Radio Layer 3 RR spec networks RAN WG3 © 3GPP 2012 SA WG3 CT WG4 lub spec, lur spec, lu spec Security MAP/GTP/BCH/SS UTRAN O&M requirements SA WG4 RAN WG4 CT WG6 Codec Radio Performance Smart Card Application Aspects Protocol aspects SA WG5 Telecom Management RAN WG5 Mobile Terminal SA WG6 Conformance Testing Mission-critical applications RAN WG6 GSM EDGE Radio Access Network 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 10
Meetings and Output Subject: Requirements 21 series Service aspects ("stage 1") 22 series Technical realization ("stage 2") 23 series Signalling protocols ("stage 3") - user equipment to network 24 series Radio aspects 25 series CODECs 26 series Data 27 series Signalling protocols ("stage 3") -(RSS-CN) and OAM&P and Charging © 3GPPfrom (overflow 201232.- range) 28 series Signalling protocols ("stage 3") - intra-fixed-network 29 series Programme management 30 series Subscriber Identity Module (SIM / USIM), IC Cards. Test specs. 31 series OAM&P and Charging 32 series Security aspects 33 series UE and (U)SIM test specifications 34 series Security algorithms 35 series LTE (Evolved UTRA), LTE-Advanced, LTE-Advanced Pro radio technology 36 series Multiple radio access technology aspects 37 series Radio technology beyond LTE 38 series • 3GPP is very much “contribution driven”! 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 11
The 5G standardisation roadmap 3GPP consultative workshop: Phoenix, September 2015 550 experts from industry, government, regulators, research and academia Agreed to split 5G Standardisation into two phases: Phase 1 (new radio and core network) to be delivered by mid 2018 (to address a more urgent sub-set of commercial needs). This is known as 3GPP Release 15. Phase 2 to be delivered by end 2019 (to address all identified use cases and requirements). 3GPP Release 16 © 3GPP 2012 Agreed that 5G standards must address 3 major use case families: eMBB, mMTC, URLLC Intention was to enable new industry sectors to benefit from 5G (e.g., Automotive, Health, Energy, Manufacturing …) ...but 5G building blocks were already being defined in ETSI, e.g., NGP NFV ETSI ISG Network Functions Virtualization (NFV): started work in 2013 ETSI ISG Multi-Access Edge Computing (MEC): started work in 2014 ENI OSM MEC 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 12
It’s more than Mobile Broadband Evolved Mobile Broadband is important The main priority for some early operators Business models and revenue streams are well understood 5G Phase1 addresses very well this use case family … but so are Ultra-Reliable Low-Latency Communications and Massive Machine Type Communications © 3GPP 2012 Some URLLC features are contained in 5G Phase 1 URLLC and mMTC to be (fully) covered in 5G Phase 2 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 13
The Internet of Things (IoT) 3GPP is making continuous effort to address the IoT market, e.g. : 1. LTE-M LTE-based Machine Type Communications (1MHz bandwidth) Higher data rates, VoLTE support, mobility, multicast, positioning 2. NB-IOT NarrowBand-IoT radio (180 kHz) added to the LTE platform Optimized for Low Power Wide Area© 3GPP 2012 Several power classes, positioning support 5G will address the following segments Massive Machine Type Communication (MTC) Critical MTC including Ultra Reliability and Low Latency 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 14
5G standardisation: Where are we now? 5G NR (new radio interface) completed ahead of schedule The specification of 5G NR completed in December 2017, 6 months ahead of schedule, at the request of those players that wished to deploy 5G early (enabling deployment in non-standalone mode) The remainder of 5G Phase 1 (including Next Generation Core Network) completed on schedule in June 2018 (enabling deployment in standalone mode) © 3GPP 2012 ..but how was that possible? 3GPP Working Groups saw a large increase in experts participation (more than 600 experts present in some working group meetings) During 2017, 3GPP processed 100 000 input contributions during 75 000 delegate/days of meetings This represents an unprecedented effort from the whole industry… 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 15
Conclusions 3GPP is an industry driven standardization activity with truly global reach Standardization of interfaces enables an interoperable, multi-vendor approach to deployment and generates mass market economies of scale 3GPP standards are the basis for operators to serve more than 5 billion unique users (sept 2018) © 3GPP 2012 5G standardization is proceeding according to schedule (and in fact slightly ahead of schedule) New industry sectors are engaging engaging with 3GPP to ensure that 5G meets their needs Work will only proceed efficiently if the end beneficiaries directly participate in the standards setting process 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 16
For more Information: adrian.scrase@etsi.org © 3GPP 2012 info@3gpp.org www.3gpp.org Search for WIDs at http://www.3gpp.org/specifications/work-plan and http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/Information/WORK_PLAN/ (See excel sheet) 3GPP Summit CEATEC – Makuhari, October 17, 2018 © 3GPP 2018 17
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