OSLO, March 1 – The advancement of 5G technology in Norwegian maritime operations provided by Telenor Maritime could benefit the Malaysian shipping industry, especially in the oil and gas as well as logistics sectors, according to Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil.
The minister on Thursday visited a state-of-the-art remote operation centre (ROC) in Horten Harbour, near here where Telenor Maritime showcased its autonomous vessel and how different communication links, including a private 5G system, connect the vessel to the ROC.
Telenor Maritime provides a high-speed connection in a closed and secure network to Massterly, the world’s first company to operate autonomous vessels at sea.
According to Fahmi, there are some practical applications of private 5G network usage particularly involving the operation of autonomous vessels that Malaysian corporations could leverage on.
“Some clever use of the technology, which I can see perhaps some of it being adopted in Malaysia… there are probably some regulatory aspects that we need to pay attention to, and also maybe some potential use cases.
“Given that we have not yet fully rolled out private 5G networks in Malaysia, I think there is a lot of potential and in the long run, it benefits Malaysia,” he said.
Fahmi is currently on a two-day working visit to Norway to attend the ‘Next Generation Communications Roundtable’ organised by Telenor Group from Feb 29 until March 1, 2024 here.
Meanwhile, Telenor senior vice-president and deputy head of Asia, Håkon Bruaset Kjøl noted that Malaysia has a lot of experience with strong industries which could make use of such partnerships to succeed in taking the full advantage of 5G.