On October 28, 2021, the South Korean government (Ministry of Science and ICT: MSIT) started offering private 5G frequencies (100MHz@4.7GHz, 600MHz@28GHz) in an effort to deploy private 5G, a crucial infrastructure for enterprises' digital transformation, across a variety of industries in South Korea.
With the availability of these private 5G frequencies, enterprises in Korea can now deploy private 5G networks independently from the public 5G networks of mobile operators.
As of June 7, 2023, private 5G frequencies have been assigned to 36 locations in 21 companies. See the list of operators and enterprises to which the MSIT has assigned private 5G frequencies.
Advantages of building a private 5G network using private 5G frequencies
(compared to building a private 5G network using public 5G networks)
An enterprise private 5G network can also be built with a fraction of the MNO's public 5G network capacity (network slicing). In this case, the uplink and downlink capacity is shared with public 5G traffic, which means that the quality of private 5G network traffic may be affected by public 5G network traffic (smartphones).
On the other hand, a private 5G network built using private 5G frequencies (4.7 GHz, 28 GHz) is independent of the MNO's public 5G network (public 5G frequency: 3.5 GHz). Therefore, a single enterprise can exclusively use 5G's high-capacity up and down links independent of public 5G network traffic.
In addition, the MNO's public 5G network is designed for downlink applications like video streaming and games, so the downlink capacity is set to be high. However, in the enterprise private network environment, there are many camera uplink applications like remote monitoring, remote driving, and AI vision, so the uplink capacity must be high.
In the public 5G network used by all citizens, the ratio of uplink and downlink capacity cannot be adjusted for a specific company. On the other hand, the private network using private 5G frequencies are used by a single company alone, so the uplink and downlink ratio can be changed as desired by the company.
5G Network | |||
Public 5G Network | Private 5G Network | ||
User | Consumer | Enterprise | |
Device | Phone | Phone, Robot, Camera, Sensor, etc. | |
Network Deployment |
deploy public 5G networks using public 5G frequency |
deploy private 5G networks reusing public 5G network resource (network equipment, frequency) : Network Slicing |
deploy private 5G networks using private 5G frequencies |
5G Frequency |
MNO's Licensed/Public 5G Frequency [3.5GHz, in Korea] |
MNO's Licensed/Public 5G Frequency [3.5GHz, in Korea] |
Private 5G Frequency
[4.7GHz, 28GHz, in Korea] |
In the following sections, the private 5G network will be explained only in the context of private networks established using private 5G frequencies (not MNO's network slicing).
Private 5G spectrum policy and regulation of the Korean government (MSIT)
This private 5G frequencies provided by the MSIT can be used in two ways.
Figure 1. Private 5G Market Players in Korea
Private 5G Solution Provider, Private 5G Operator, and Enterprise
In Japan, which made private 5G (local 5G in Japanese) frequencies available to the market in 2019, two years earlier than Korea, MNOs such as NTT Docomo and KDDI are not allowed to become private 5G network operators.
In South Korea, as in Japan, MNOs (public 5G network operators: SK Telecom, KT, and LG U+) are not allowed to become private 5G operators.
The Korean government (MSIT) prohibits MNOs from entering the market as private 5G operators due to monopoly concerns.
If MNOs are allowed to participate as private 5G operators, it is obvious that mobile operators who have already designed, built, and operated public 5G networks for several years will monopolize the private 5G network market, just as they monopolize the public 5G market today.
In this case, it is difficult to expect the expansion of the private 5G network market and ecosystem through competition in the B2B market with the emergence of various new private 5G operators expected by the government, and the government loses the justification for institutionalizing private 5G frequency.
Figure 2. Private 5G Regulation in Korea
In South Korea, mobile operators (MNOs: SK Telecom, KT, and LG U+) are not allowed to become private 5G operators.