Production of phones using 2G and 3G technology would stop in Việt Nam from the beginning of July. — File Photo |
HÀ NỘI — The production and import of phones using 2G and 3G technology will stop from the beginning of July, according to a new circular from the Ministry of Information and Communications.
Circular No 43 about national technical regulations on terrestrial mobile communication equipment, which takes effect from July 1, states all mobile phones manufactured or imported into Việt Nam must use Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA) or 4G technology.
This means all mobile devices with simply 2G, 3G or combined technology would not be produced and imported into Việt Nam.
Phones which were produced and imported before July 1 would still be allowed to be sold.
The circular was considered a step towards turning off 2G in the first quarter of 2022 as well as the programme of universalisation of smartphones.
Previously, Hoàng Minh Cường, Director of the Telecommunications Department under the Ministry of Information and Communications, said that the production of phones with 2G technology had decreased significantly. The number of phones fell by 6-7 million units from the end of 2019 to the end of the third quarter of 2020.
Cường said that the other 12 million phones were expected to be wiped out in the first quarter of 2022.
Việt Nam aims for all residents to use smartphones by 2025 with the strategy of providing “made-in-Việt Nam” smartphones costing less than US$50. Many phone producers and network providers have signed up to the plan.
Vũ Hoàng Liên, President of Việt Nam Internet Association, said that the universalisation of smartphones was a bold effort to promote national digital transformation, digital economy and e-Government.
A market research study by Adsota showed that about 44.9 per cent of the Vietnamese population used smartphones by 2020.
Việt Nam was piloting 5G services and targeted to universalise 5G in the 2023-25 period. — VNS