ABI Sees Private Network Deployments on The Rise With Revenues in Excess of $64B by 2030
November 25, 2020
Industrial manufacturing, energy
production, and logistics sectors
driving deployments
With
enterprise 5G maturing, the
importance of private networks for
the enterprise domain will continue
to grow. According to new research
by global tech market advisory firm
ABI Research, the demand for private
network deployments will be driven
primarily by heavy industry
verticals. Industrial manufacturing,
energy production (including mining,
oil and gas, and logistics) alone
will generate private network
revenues of US$32.38 billion by
2030, representing half of the US$64
Billion overall private network
revenues.
“These findings show the importance
of private networks, particularly
for automating mission- or even
life-critical use cases, that
require the highest possible network
reliability and availability and are
characterized by a high degree of
network integrity to prevent data
from leaving the enterprise
premises,” says Leo Gergs, Research
Analyst for 5G Markets at ABI
Research. Enterprises that require
network slicing capabilities to
separate mission-critical from
non-mission-critical use cases
within the same physical network
will turn to private networks.”
Two main factors are causing the
surge in private network demand.
Gergs explains, “First, there is a
huge rise in demand for automation
and enterprise digitization. What
has started with Industry 4.0 is now
exacerbated by the aftermath of the
global COVID-19 outbreak.
Enterprises in industrial
manufacturing, logistics, and oil
and gas are now accelerating their
digitization plans to reduce their
dependency on manual labor
availability and increase the
resilience of their business
operations against sudden
disruptions to supply chains. The
second is the addition to the
demand-side effect. Gergs continues,
“The market for private network
deployments will also benefit from a
supply-side effect. The freeze of
Release 16 gives enterprises the
much-needed reassurance of 5G
capabilities for enterprise-grade
connectivity, which allows chipset
and module manufacturers to grow the
device ecosystem for compatible
hardware. The maturing device
ecosystem, in turn, drives down
prices per module and therefore
makes the deployment of private 5G
network more cost-efficient, which
will spur additional interest from
enterprises.”
There
is a growing number of private
network offerings emerging on the
market to address this rising
opportunity. While private network
operators like Ambra, Citymesh or
Edzcom are threatening traditional
CSPs’ market share by monetizing
managed services other than
connectivity, hyperscalers like AWS,
Google, IBM, and Google are
launching their private network
offerings in co-creation efforts
with telco players. In addition,
software companies like Athonet or
Quortus benefit from trends toward
network virtualization, which allows
them to offer a virtualized core
network either through System
Integrators or to enterprises
directly.
“These breathtaking developments
show the amazing pace at which this
market is evolving. Against this
backdrop, it is important that all
players in the enterprise
connectivity domain develop a
durable business strategy to profit
from this rising market,” concludes
Gergs.