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4G to dominate cellular IoT until 2028, when 5G takes over

By 2030 we'll be shipping 1.2 billion cellular-module devices each year, says analyst

4G will continue to be the dominant cellular connectivity technology used by IoT devices until 2028, according to a report from Counterpoint Research.

"With the ongoing sunset of 2G and 3G networks across the world, most of the demand has been shifting to LPWA, 4G Cat 1 and 4G Cat 1 bis technologies until now," said senior research analyst Soumen Mandal in a teaser of research released on Monday.

Mandal acknowledged that NB-IoT will still remain popular in parts of Asia, and Europe, while 4G Cat 1-based modules will continue to grow for a few more years.

2028 was marked as the year shipments of 5G cellular modules will exceed 4G devices, with the analyst willing to designate 2027 as the start of the "5G era."

Counterpoint Research said the transition from 4G to 5G will be faster than previous transitions – 2G to 3G or Low Power Wide Area (LPWA) to 4G.

In 2030, shipments of all cellular modules will exceed 1.2 billion units – and join a fleet of 2.5 billion 5G units already shipped.

The researcher also predicted that when 5G does finally take over, mass adoption of IoT applications involving everything from connected cars to healthcare to wearables will be the driver.

6G allegedly won't appear until 2029, and will initially be deployed for high-end enterprise applications and broadband services. But just because 5G will dominate doesn't mean 4G, LPWA, and others will go away, according to Counterpoint's Neil Shah.

Counterpoint research IOT connectivity futures

Counterpoint Research
IOT connectivity predictions. Click to enlarge

"5G will be preferred for Industrial 4.0 (like robotics, automation and digital twins), router/CPE (like FWA and private networks) and automotive (like connected and autonomous mobility) applications, LPWA will be preferred for utilities (smart meter) and 4G Cat 1 bis and 5G RedCap for POS applications," said the research veep.

Companies are already preparing for this future of interactive machines as they automate or add robots into old factories.

Some regions, like Asia, which have high-volume manufacturing, are already loaded up with robots and automated equipment.

The International Federation of Robotics reported Asia's average robot density had an 18 per cent CAGR from 2015 until 2020.

Meanwhile, Germany's Siemens and Bosch are currently retrofitting their own factories with private 5G networks and testing autonomous vehicles that communicate with each other on the 5G network inside the factory and unconnected from public networks. ®

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