Sweden has banned telcos from using Huawei or ZTE network equipment for their 5G rollouts as the nation joins a growing list of western countries that have restricted the Chinese companies' involvement due to security concerns.
The Swedish Post and Telecom Authority (PTS), the country's telecommunications agency, made the decision after conducting a security assessment that found the companies' kits could potentially harm Sweden's security.
The security assessment was made in consultation with the Swedish Armed Forces and the Swedish Security Service, the PTS said.
The decision comes a few weeks ahead of the nation's 2.3GHz and 3.5GHz 5G spectrum auction that has been set for November 10.
Sweden's four main telcos, Hi3G Access, Net4Mobility, Telia Sverige, and Teracom have already gained approval to participate in the auction.
320 MHz in the 3.5GHz band and 80MHz in the 2.3 GHz band will be available during the auction. To partake in the auction, telcos will have to provide a minimum bid of SEK 1.5 billion for spectrum in the 3.5Ghz band -- SEK 100 million per licence of 20 MHz -- and SEK 160 million -- SEK 20 million per licence of 10 MHz -- for the 2.3 GHz band.
The ban issued on Tuesday also mandates that telcos must phase out any Huawei and ZTE products currently being used in existing infrastructure for the radio access network, the transmission network, the core network, and the service and maintenance network by the end of 2024.
Last week, two of Belgium's major telcos[1] chose to use Nokia and Ericsson equipment for their 5G networks while also dropping Huawei gear in the process.
Meanwhile, the UK's largest telco, BT, also picked Nokia[2] to build more of its 5G networks across the country as