New Delhi: The idea to develop India specific 5G standard is an existential threat and will lock the country out of the global ecosystem, a senior Bharti Airtel official said on Tuesday.
The official also said the development of a separate 5G standard will impact innovation.
"There are sometimes talks that India must have its own 5G standard. This is an existential threat which could lock India out of the global ecosystem and slow down the pace of innovation. We could have let our citizens down if you allow that to happen," Bharti Airtel CEO Gopal Vittal said while speaking at virtual India Mobile Congress 2020.
The statement from Vittal followed a speech by RIL Chairman Mukesh Ambani at the event, where he mentioned that Jio's 5G network "will be powered by indigenous-developed network, hardware and technology components."
Jio has sought spectrum in certain frequencies from the Department of Telecom for holding trials of the latest 5G technology. The company's wholly-owned US-based subsidiary Radisys has already started selling some of the 5G solutions to foreign companies.
Vittal said India should have an open ecosystem. He cited examples of CDMA and GSM to push his case.
"CDMA was better technology, but GSM won because it was more accepted technology. More companies in the world embraced GSM. GSM won because it became part of the global ecosystem and CDMA died," he added.
He said that there is a need to create an India open ecosystem and promote applications developed for India and by India.