Huawei MBBS Africa: Unlocking 5G Opportunity in the Region
Summary Bullets:
β’ Huawei aims to accelerate Digital Africa with wider connectivity, 5G, and sustainability.
β’ Industrial 5G, especially in mining, can drive 5G monetization in Africa. This is supported by Huaweiβs broad portfolio and ecosystem.
Huawei held its MBBS Africa in Cape Town, South Africa in November 2025. As one of the leading telecom network vendors, Huawei shared its regional vision β to drive βDigital Africaβ through wider connectivity, 5G, and sustainable solutions.
GlobalDataβs Africa & Middle East Mobile Broadband Forecast shows that mobile data subscription has been growing steadily at high single-digit rates over the past several years and is expected to rise at a 7.2% CAGR over the next five years. While 5G adoption is increasing, the penetration rate is still low compared to other regions. Huawei highlighted its initiatives and broad capabilities to accelerate growth in Africa. These include multi-band massive MIMO for additional capacity, active antenna solutions for efficient and flexible deployments, FWA for new use cases, cost-efficient solutions for rural deployments, and various energy-saving technologies such as adaptive power backup. Several operators including Telkom SA, Safaricom Kenya, and Airtel Tanzania showcased how they are leveraging these technologies in their networks. Huawei is also transforming its engagement model with African operators, moving beyond the role of a network vendor to become to a digitalization partner by delivering innovative solutions aligned with business needs and monetization strategies.
As 5G deployment gathers pace, monetization will become critical for operators. GlobalData research estimates 5G users will account for 7.1% of all mobile users by the end of 2025 and will grow to 26.7% by 2030. However, 5G monetization remains a global challenge even in advanced markets. The challenge will be an even bigger hurdle for African operators due to slower overall adoption and the relatively lower spending power. This makes the importance of enterprise 5G as a key monetization engine. Horizontal services such as FWA, private 5G, and IoT are essential. These use cases can help enterprises address various needs such as increasing reliability and security for critical applications, agile connectivity for temporary sites (e.g., events, remote operations), SD-WAN underlay, and large-scale IoT deployments. Meanwhile, 5G-enabled industrial solutions represent an even larger opportunity. Mining and resources, one of the regionβs largest sectors, can benefit from applications like autonomous drilling, remote operation/maintenance, and worker safety. Globally, 5G adoption in mining is maturing and widely adopted. GlobalDataβs 5G & Private Network Deployment Tracker shows that 7% of global deployments are in the mining sector. Other major verticals are construction, tourism, and hospitality are among other major verticals in the region. There is a growing number of use cases including drones and surveillance, digital twins, and safety in construction; and mixed reality, robots, and smart facilities in tourism/hospitality.
While the opportunity for 5G-enabled industrial services is increasing solidly, the solutions are far more complicated. They span across broader ICT stacks and require IT-OT integrations. Nevertheless, this plays to Huaweiβs strengths. The vendor has comprehensive portfolio from cellular and fixed networks, to cloud, server, end points, AI, and industrial capabilities. For example, autonomous drilling in mining requires private network, but also edge computing, AI/analytics, and vertical expertise. Besides, the company has wide partner ecosystem including industrial players and end-point manufacturers. And more importantly, Huawei has extensive references and experience delivering these solutions cost-effectively in other emerging markets like Asia and South America. It can showcase its other successful deployments to gain market trust and drive its brand share in the enterprise 5G space.
