5GPPP VerticalsWhitePaper 2020 Final
5GPPP VerticalsWhitePaper 2020 Final
5GPPP VerticalsWhitePaper 2020 Final
Version 1.0
DOI 10.5281/zenodo.3698113
URL http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3698113
5G PPP & 5G IA Empowering Verticals Industries through 5G Networks
Table of Contents
Executive Summary ...................................................................................................................... 4
1 Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 6
1.1 References.................................................................................................................... 6
2 5G PPP: Requirements and business case analysis for the vertical industries ................. 8
2.1 Vertical industries digitization in the 5G PPP Programme .................................... 8
2.2 Use case business motivation ................................................................................... 10
2.3 References.................................................................................................................. 14
3 Architectural considerations for the verticals ................................................................... 15
3.1 Architectural enhancements .................................................................................... 15
3.2 Validating the 5G specifications .............................................................................. 17
3.3 References.................................................................................................................. 18
4 Supporting the Verticals in the context of the 5G PPP..................................................... 20
4.1 Indicative Use Cases for the Vertical Sectors ........................................................ 20
4.1.1 Automotive ......................................................................................................................... 20
4.1.2 Transportation ..................................................................................................................... 29
4.1.3 Media .................................................................................................................................. 32
4.1.4 Smart City ........................................................................................................................... 38
4.1.5 Healthcare ........................................................................................................................... 42
4.1.6 Factory of the future............................................................................................................ 48
4.1.7 Energy ................................................................................................................................. 51
4.1.8 Public Safety ....................................................................................................................... 54
4.1.9 Ports - Airports .................................................................................................................... 56
4.1.10 Tourism .......................................................................................................................... 58
4.1.11 Agrifood ......................................................................................................................... 59
4.2 Platforms to support Verticals ................................................................................ 60
4.3 References.................................................................................................................. 66
5 Enablers to support verticals.............................................................................................. 70
5.1 Smart Management of Streaming Services ............................................................ 70
5.2 Distributed Network Security.................................................................................. 73
5.3 Indoor Location Services ......................................................................................... 74
5.4 3D Indoor Localisation for Emergency Scenarios ................................................. 75
5.5 Positioning and Flow Monitoring in Large Venues and Dense Urban
Environments ......................................................................................................................... 76
5.6 Localization and Network Management for Education........................................ 77
Executive Summary
This white paper summarizes the progress and key findings produced by 5G PPP projects to
provide 5G network services for vertical industries. It provides information about
requirements and business cases addressed by the projects. It discusses in detail several
exemplary use cases from 11 different vertical sectors and identifies key 5G features that
have been used to meet the specified requirements.
The building of sustainable business cases is based on the identification of the problems which
verticals are facing, that are worthwhile to be solved through solutions based on distinctive 5G
capabilities. The above-mentioned projects have suggested robust hypotheses about business and
societal benefits and are validating the sustainability of their use cases. The benefits reported in
this white paper have been categorized as society critical, business critical, cost decrease and
quality increase benefits. Some achievements in vertical sectors, apart from the key players and
large industries, are starting to appear also for some SMEs, where their technological
achievements make a difference. The 5G PPP Initiative has demonstrated the feasibility for
SMEs to develop and deploy 5G innovative solutions in vertical markets. This will hopefully
allow more SMEs to follow a similar path, eventually increasing the European market share on a
global scale. 5G flexible solutions for verticals will support various deployment options and
business models in an optimum way with respect to spectrum usage, avoiding potential issues like
spectrum fragmentation, underutilised spectrum, coexistence between public and non-public
networks etc.
5G networks are providing significant improvements in terms of throughput, delay, reliability and
guaranteed QoS. Moreover, 5G networks introduce several architectural enablers that capitalize
on network softwarization. An indicative list of these enablers spans from network slicing, Multi-
access Edge Computing (MEC), adoption of service-based architecture (SBA), functional split in
Radio Access Network (RAN), security intelligence, smart network management, support of
location services and context awareness. 5G PPP projects have used these 5G features to
address challenges identified by verticals. Moreover, in the context of the 5G PPP Initiative,
the use of satellite communications has been investigated as a cost-effective way for the
deployment of 5G services to underserved rural and remote areas as well as maritime and
airborne platforms (ships, planes).
The evolution of 5G networks to address verticals’ needs is having an impact on standardization
activities. 5G PPP projects have provided a number of concepts and solutions to SDOs. This
work is expected to further continue during the following years as the full digitization of vertical
industries will be one of the drivers for the evolution of 5G specifications.
5G PPP projects have contributed to the design of many of these technological enablers. At
the same time, they have worked to provide specific solutions for verticals. These solutions will
change our way of living, open new business opportunities for Europe and create new jobs across
all vertical sectors. Although one may consider that some of the described functionalities could
be supported by 4G networks, a closer look clarifies why 5G networks are needed to transform
the vertical industries and support emerging applications.
A key lesson learned from the trials performed in the context of 5G PPP projects, is that 5G
networks are not only about faster and more reliable networks. 5G is introducing a level of
flexibility in the deployment of new services that have a diverse set of characteristics, which 4G
networks would not be able to support. This has enabled researchers to create novel services, parts
of which can be implemented over different network slices. 5G networks have been designed to
be fully modular and allow the dynamic chaining of virtual functions and allocation of
resources. These characteristics are the catalyst for the creation of an innovation ecosystem
that is expected to shape the full digitization of vertical industries.
Although the 5G PPP Initiative has achieved many goals, many challenges still remain. The
outcomes of 5G PPP will serve as the basis for the Smart Networks and Services (SNS)
Programme that aims to organise the European research and innovation activities for the
evolution of communication networks in the timeframe until 2028. One of the main objectives of
the SNS Programme is the full digitization of vertical industries.
1 Introduction
5G has become commercial in 2019 ahead of schedule. Only one year later, 62 operators had
launched 5G services in 32 markets; while a further 94 operators have announced plans to launch
the service [1-1]. 5G subscriptions will account for the 20% of the world customer base in 2025
with operators investing 1 trillion Euros in mobile infrastructures, 80% of which in 5G [1-2]. In
most countries, operators started offering 5G to customers for enhanced Mobile Broadband
(eMBB) services such as Cloud Gaming not supported by 4G. 5G handsets of the most popular
brands are now available and new models are launched on a weekly basis. Industrial 5G will be
implemented through 3G PPP Release 16. This new version will empower 5G with new
revolutionary capabilities such as Ultra-Reliable Low Latency Communications (URLLC) and
massive Machine Type Communications (mMTC) that will accelerate digital transformation
across different industries in the next coming years. 5G is expected to generate 62.5 B€ of
economic benefits across four sectors (automotive, healthcare, transport and utilities) by 2025 [1-
3].
Europe has been at the forefront of 5G launches. At the end of 2019, 5G commercial services
were available in 10 countries [1-4]. While 5G appeared on the mass market with consumer facing
offers, 5G was validated (i.e., design was checked for its appropriateness to meet verticals’
requirements) and evaluated (i.e., quantitative information of some characteristics of a certain
design, such as key performance indicators, were computed) for industrial applications in more
than 180 trials across 28 member states. In the automotive sector trials are taking place at a pan-
European scale through 11 cross border corridors. Vertical trials have been performed through
5G Public Private Partnership projects (5G PPP) funded by 700M€ of the European Union
research funding grants and matched by 3,5B€ of private funding in the 2014 – 2020 timeframe.
This white paper summarizes the progress and several key findings produced by 5G PPP projects
to provide services for vertical industries. It starts with an analysis of requirements and business
cases which are addressed by the projects. Then, it describes the key findings for 5G architectural
extensions needed to support services for vertical industries. It summarizes an indicative list of
5G features that have been already demonstrated, or that are currently in the planning and
implementation phase by several 5G PPP projects. Then, detailed information is provided for
several exemplary verticals use cases and the use of 5G networks to support their requirements.
The 5G PPP Partnership has already covered more than 10 different vertical industries. This
description includes also some justification why 5G is needed to support these use cases and how
European Union (EU) funded projects have demonstrated or plan to demonstrate the key benefits
of 5G for the verticals. Moreover, it reports several examples on how generic enablers could be
used for more than one vertical industry.
For reasons of completeness the white paper also discusses the contribution of satellite networks,
the spectrum landscape, the impact in standardization activities as well as the involvement of
Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) in the abovementioned 5G PPP activities. Finally,
the white paper concludes with a brief presentation of the planned activities in the context of the
Smart Networks and Services (SNS) Partnership proposal under the Horizon Europe framework.
One of the main objectives of this proposal is the full digitization of the vertical industries.
1.1 References
[1-1] GSMA: Global 5G Landscape 1Q2020, Online:
https://data.gsmaintelligence.com/research/research/research-2020/global-5g-landscape-
q1-2020
An analysis of the work of 5G PPP projects clearly shows (c.f., Figure 2.3) that in phase 2 the
focus was on the development of key technical breakthroughs whereas phase 3 projects cover all
vertical industries and perform trials and pilots.
is pivotal to address stumbling blocks, business model innovation complexities and the
anticipated 5G market growth.
2.3 References
[2-1] 5G PPP Phase 2 projects, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/5g-ppp-phase-2-projects/
[2-2] 5G PPP Progress Monitoring Report 2018, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2020/01/5G-PPP_PMR2018-Sept2019_Final.pdf
[2-3] 5G PPP Phase 2 Key Achievements, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/phase-2-key-
achievements/
[2-4] 5G Infrastructure PPP, Trials & Pilots, Sept. 2019, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2019/09/5GInfraPPP_10TPs_Brochure_FINAL_low_singlepages.pdf
[2-5] 5G PPP Phase 3 projects, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/5g-ppp-phase-3-projects/
[2-6] 5G Automotive WG, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/5g-ppp-work-groups/
[2-7] 5G PPP Automotive Working Group, “Business Feasibility Study for 5G V2X
Deployment”, Version 2, Feb. 2019, Online: https://bscw.5g-
ppp.eu/pub/bscw.cgi/d293672/5G%20PPP%20Automotive%20WG_White%20Paper_F
eb2019.pdf
[2-8] 5G PPP Automotive WG, Initial proposal for 5G Strategic Deployment Agenda for
Connected and Automated Mobility in Europe, Oct. 2019, Online: https://5g-
ppp.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/20191031-Initial-Proposal-5G-SDA-for-CAM-in-
Europe.pdf
[2-9] 5G EVE 5G European Validation platform for Extensive trials, Online: https://www.5g-
eve.eu/
[2-10] 5G-VINNI: 5G Verticals INNovation Infrastructure, Online: https://www.5g-vinni.eu/
[2-11] 5Genesis: 5th Generation End-to-end Network, Experimentation, System Integration,
and Showcasing, Online: http://www.5genesis.eu/
[2-12] https://5g-ppp.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Vertical-industries-in-the-5G-PPP.pdf
[2-13] 5G PPP Verticals Cartography, Online: https://global5g.org/cartography
[2-14] 5G Infrastructure Association (5G IA), Online: https://5g-ia.eu/
[2-15] Public Safety Communications Europe (PSCE), Online: https://www.psc-europe.eu/
[2-16] 5G Automotive Association (5GAA), Online: https://5gaa.org/
[2-17] European Road Transport Telematics Implementation Co-ordination Organisation
(ERTICO), Online: https://ertico.com/
[2-18] European Cyber Security Organisation (ECSO), Online: https://ecs-org.eu/
[2-19] 5G PPP Full 5G Project, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/revised-5g-ppp-stakeholders-picture-
and-glossary/
[2-20] 5G IA, 2020, Business Validation in 5G PPP vertical use cases, June 2020 Online:
https://5g-ppp.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/5G_White_paper_Business-validation-
v1.0a.pdf
[2-21] 5G PPP 5G Solutions project, Online: https://www.5gsolutionsproject.eu/
[2-22] Statista, Global construction equipment unit sales between 2018 and 2022 by region,
Online: https://www.statista.com/statistics/280345/global-construction-machinery-
market-size-by-region/
[2-23] Car sales statistics, 2018 (Full Year) Europe: Car Sales per EU and EFTA country,
Online: https://www.best-selling-cars.com/europe/2018-full-year-europe-car-sales-per-
eu-and-efta-country/
[2-24] Ecorys, Idate, VVA, CBO Consulting, Wik consult, Supporting the implementation of
CEF2 Digital - SMART 2017/0018, EU Commission, Brussel, 2020
support specific requirements for content delivery. That is, for live video streaming, mission
critical communications, and information dissemination in IoT and V2X domains, specialized
functions for content delivery of unicast and multicast data need to be placed in the core as well
as the access parts of the network. To support such extensions, the core network adopts the
principles of SBA, where the rather rigid reference point interactions between the network
functions are replaced by a service-based interface approach. Within the SBA framework, any
network function in the core network can register and discover services utilizing the well-
established Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure HTTP(s). The SBA paradigm enables an easy
addition of slice-specific network functions and interactions with the vertical domains through
network exposure mechanisms. On the RAN side, the functional split based on central-unit /
distributed unit (CU/DU) enables a virtualized implementation of the higher-layer RAN protocols
of a CU, and thus easy integration of VNFs in the RAN.
Moreover, Function-as-a-Service (FaaS) should be an integral part of cloud services. The FaaS
addresses use cases that require the immediate setup of an elastic communication service. A very
nice example of these kind of services is described in [3-1] about the media production and
delivery. Such solutions require extensions and modifications for smart network management
by providing automated mechanisms that will allow the fast and easy deployment of network
slices along with the necessary network and computing resources, their dynamic adaptation during
the lifetime of a service and their eventual release when these are no longer needed. To this end,
the network management interfaces with orchestration (e.g., ETSI Management and Orchestration
– MANO) to handle the network slice instantiation in the physical infrastructure.
As the support of vertical industries involves multiple stakeholders, security aspects should be
re-examined so that efficient end-to-end security solutions are integrated in the network
infrastructure at various levels (e.g., end device, edge computing, core network and vertical
application servers). For example, security at the mobile edge has the advantage of being far more
scalable and selective to the needs of end users and would typically act as a first line of defence
in a security architecture performing tasks such as Scanning Security, Denial of Service Security
and Sniffing Security.
Finally, a rather important enabler for 5G networks is related to context awareness. One main
example for context awareness is the knowledge about the exact location of a terminal. This is
essential for a variety of existing and emerging vertical sectors requiring continuous
(indoor/outdoor) high-accuracy localization to not only fulfil the demanding QoS of 5G and
beyond 5G new services but also enhance the intelligence of user applications. The positional
information of network nodes is encapsulated by soft information, the ensemble of positional and
environmental information, respectively, associated with measurements and contextual data [3-
8]. This can be used for example for location-based data access as well as user monitoring and
guiding in diverse indoor scenarios such as in museums, supermarkets, train tunnels, emergencies
within buildings as well as in outdoor scenarios such as large venues and dense urban
environments. It can also be used to guide network management decisions such as load balancing
as well as provide co-localisation information in the event of social distancing in health
epidemics/pandemic. Since not everyone may be equipped with a smartphone, imaging the
environment for the detection of the location of other people using backscattering from radio
transmission is important for a more nuanced context awareness.
Section 4 provides details for a subset of Phase 2 and Phase 3 5G PPP project solutions that have
been validated or are planned for 11 different vertical sectors. The indicative list in Table 2 is a
compilation of key 5G features used in the specific projects. The number of 5G features depends
on the number of projects that have been active in a specific vertical area. Although in principle
all 5G features can be used to support a vertical sector, the following list provides a snapshot of
what the most important 5G features could be at this moment.
Smart Factories
Transportation
Section 4.1.10
Section 4.1.11
5G Features
Public Safety
Section 4.1.1
Section 4.1.2
Section 4.1.3
Section 4.1.4
Section 4.1.5
Section 4.1.6
Section 4.1.7
Section 4.1.8
Section 4.1.9
Automotive
Smart City
Healthcare
(Air)Ports
Agrifood
Tourism
Energy
Media
Network X X X X X X X X X X X
Slicing
Mobile Edge X X X X X X X X
Computing
Functional X X
Split in RAN
Advanced X X X
Security
Smart X X X X X
network
management
Location X X X X X X X
services &
Context
Awareness
5G NR X X X X X X X X X X X
capabilities
Softwarization X X X X
Service X X X
chaining
Traffic X
steering
Spectrum and X X X
Coverage
Guaranteed X X X X X X
QoS
Section 5 discusses in detail a list of enablers that can serve multiple verticals. These enablers
span from network slicing (c.f., Sections 5.9 and 5.10), security (c.f., Section 5.2), advanced
traffic steering over multiple Radio Access Technologies (RATs – c.f., Section 5.1) and use of
location (c.f., Sections 5.3 up to 5.8). This list is an indicative list of the successful solutions
produced in the context of 5G PPP Initiative to cover a diverse set of verticals.
performance of 5G networks and verify that indeed they meet the requirements specified by
International Telecommunication Union-Radiocommunication (ITU-R) WP5D (Working Party
5D International Mobile Telecommunications – IMT Systems), an Independent Evaluation Group
(IEG) has been created and supported by the 5G PPP.
The 5G PPP IMT-2020 IEG was organized under the umbrella of the 5G IA, with participants
from active 5G PPP projects and 5G IA members, to perform an independent evaluation of IMT-
2020 proposals to support ITU-R WP5D for the finalization of the IMT-2020 recommendation in
2020. This evaluation group has been recognized by ITU-R as a contributor of an independent
second opinion on the Radio Interface Technologies, which have been submitted by SDOs to
ITU-R to be recognized as member of the IMT family of systems for mobile and wireless
communications.
In December 2019, the 5G IA IMT-2020 evaluation group submitted the interim evaluation report
to the ITU-R evaluation workshop in Geneva on December 10 and 11, 2019. The report contains
a detailed analysis of the analytical, inspection and simulation characteristics defined in ITU-R
Reports [3-9], [3-10], [3-11]. The final evaluation report was submitted to ITU-R in February
2020.
The final evaluation reports, including the considered scenarios, the main configuration settings
and further information for the validation of KPIs, are available as follows [3-12]:
• Report: 5G IA Final Evaluation Reports for different SDO submissions February 2020
• System-level calibration results:
o Whitepaper with description of calibration activities
o Matlab calibration files
o Calibration procedure performed
As can be seen from the results, a 5G network is able to deliver the demanding KPIs under
the target scenarios (e.g., use of Multiple-Input/Multiple-Output (MIMO) antennas and
Carrier Aggregation, using make-before-break handovers etc.). This is a very important
milestone to validate that indeed 5G system can support the vertical industries. This however
is the first step. The full industry digitization of the vertical industries and the support of new
emerging services require further technological solutions. At the level of SDOs, work is underway
to provide such solutions. Moreover, at a European level, a new Smart Networks and Services
(SNS) Partnership proposal is under preparation (c.f., section 10) to provide those breakthroughs
that will enable the full digitization of the vertical industries.
3.3 References
[3-1] 5G PPP Architecture WG, View on 5G Architecture, February 2020, DOI
10.5281/zenodo.3265031, Online: URL http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3265031
[3-2] Simone Redana, ÖmerBulakci, Christian Mannweiler, Laurent Gallo, David Navrátil,
Holger Karl, Anastasius Gavras, Stephanie Parker, John Cosmas, Nawar Jawad,
Mukhald Salih et al. "5GPPP Architecture Working Group View on 5G Architecture"
EUCNC Valencia Spain 17th - 21st June 2019
[3-3] Kaloxylos, A survey and an analysis of network slicing in 5G networks, Accepted for
publication IEEE Standards Magazine, March 2018
[3-4] 3GPP TS 23.501 v16.3.0 “System architecture for the 5G System (5GS); Stage 2
(Release 16),” Dec 2019.
[3-5] 3GPP TS 23.003 V16.1.0 (2019-12) “Numbering, addressing and identification
(Release 16)”
4.1.1 Automotive
Even though automated driving for individual vehicles can be implemented without connectivity,
there is no doubt that for circulation with other traffic participants (ideally in an altruistic manner),
communication among vehicles, road infrastructure, and vulnerable road users, such as
pedestrians, can boost the capabilities of automated driving at all levels of driving automation,
from driver assistance to high or full driving automation [4-1]. The success of high degrees of
connected and automated driving has the potential to boost road safety, increase the efficiency of
mobility, allow enhanced traffic management, reduce environmental impact of road traffic, and
improve passenger experience through infotainment services.
Connectivity offers a good complement to the on-board sensors by extending vision and detection
range even when visual line-of-sight is not available. In addition, connectivity is key to
cooperative functions that will allow vehicles, infrastructure and other road users to share
information that can help the vehicles to coordinate their actions and finally to take the right
collective decisions and adapt to the traffic situation. Cooperative, Connected and Automated
Mobility (CCAM) refers exactly to this vision where cooperation, connectivity, and automation
as complementary technologies can be jointly used to increase safety and efficiency of mobility
of future vehicles.
For these reasons and for the innovative business potentials that promise to have a dramatic
positive impact into society and economy, the 5G PPP portfolio includes a number of projects
which have contributed or are actually contributing to developing and testing 5G features for the
automotive vertical.
Cellular Vehicle-to-Everything (C-V2X) communications is considered one of the key enablers
of CCAM. C-V2X communications encompasses both short-range (PC5 interface, also called
side-link) and wide-area (Uu interface) communications, designed specifically for use by vehicles
and associated road infrastructure. C-V2X is an umbrella term, which encapsulates all 3GPP V2X
technologies (New Radio – NR-V2X and Long Term Evolution – LTE-V2X). It should be noted
that LTE-V2X side-link/direct relates to 3GPP Rel. 14 or 15 specifications (LTE based), whereas
NR-V2X side-link/direct relates to 3GPP Rel. 16 and beyond specifications (NR based). A 5G-
V2X vehicle can combine LTE-V2X and NR-V2X, where LTE-V2X side-link (PC5) is used for
broadcast safety messages such as CAM messages or distributed environment notification
messages (DENM) for basic safety services and NR-V2X side-link (PC5) is used for delivering
advanced driving functionalities.
One of the 5G PPP phase 2 projects [4-2], had as a goal to evaluate and propose radio access
network and system architecture enhancements aiming at supporting the strict requirements of
V2X use cases. It defined five Use Case Classes (UCCs) taking into consideration the different
sets of operations required by cooperative and automated vehicles [4-3]: a) Cooperative
manoeuvres, b) Cooperative perception, c) Cooperative safety, d) Intelligent autonomous
navigation, e) Remote driving. Each UCC enables a different functionality and consists of various
use cases. 5GCAR selected one relevant and representative use case from each of the UCCs taking
into account their impact (e.g., societal, safety purposes, business opportunities), their frequent
occurrence in future highways or urban environments and the challenges that they set for the
communication system (Figure 4.1): a) lane merge, b) see-through, c) network-assisted vulnerable
road-user protection, d) high definition local map acquisition, and e) remote driving for automated
parking. For each of them, studies based on KPIs have been made focusing on three categories:
automotive requirements, network requirements and qualitative requirements.
• Sidelink design: basic design for side-link (discovery, synchronization signal and
reference signal design).
• Full duplex: cognitive resource usage for Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communication and
collision detection/avoidance.
• Reliability enhancements: trade-off between reliability, latency and capacity for
reliability enhancement to both data and control channels.
• Positioning Enhancement: real-time positioning, trajectory estimation and tracking.
• Multi-connectivity Cooperation: improved service availability by jointly using several
communication modes or technologies instead of relying only on one mode/technology
(i.e., only Uu or only side-link) that might not be able to support some use cases.
• Multi-operator communication: enhancements are required for dealing with the proper
(in terms of delay and reliability) communication of the vehicles belonging to different
operators or in cross-border scenarios.
• Edge Computing Enhancements: availability of computing capabilities at the edge of the
network (i.e., edge computing) opens potential for several improvements in mobile
networks to support vehicular use cases. Enhancements are needed from a core network
perspective as well as from an access network point of view.
• Network orchestration and management: improved orchestration capabilities able to cope
with the unique requirements of vehicular use cases and with improved network
management and re-configurability capabilities to cope with the dynamicity in terms of
traffic demand in vehicular scenarios.
The project demonstrated three different use cases using 5G technologies, namely: a) Lane merge
coordination, b) Cooperative perception for manoeuvres of connected vehicles, c) Vulnerable
road user protection [4-6].
Three further 5G PPP projects are working on large-scale trials for CCAM, with particular
emphasis on cross-border operation [4-7], [4-8], [4-9]. The trials are conducted along cross-border
corridors between different European countries, with the ultimate target to build the foundations
to deploy 5G infrastructure providing pan-European transportation paths with 5G connectivity
and uninterrupted services, which can facilitate high levels of driving automation.
The first one [4-7] focuses its trials on:
1) Tele-Operated Driving, which consists in driving a vehicle from a remote driving and
control centre by a human being, by either actuating directly on the car steering wheel
and pedals, or by sending trajectories that the vehicle must follow.
2) High Definition Mapping, which consists in exchanging information to dynamically
generate high-definition maps, with very high accuracy to detect both dynamic and static
objects, which allow high levels of automated driving.
3) Anticipated Cooperative Collision Avoidance, which consists in allowing the exchange
of information between vehicles to reduce the probability of accident or collision due to
obstacles that they may have come across on the road; e.g. traffic jams, sudden braking
of a vehicle or unexpected manoeuvring of a vehicle ahead, or cut-in anticipation when a
car suddenly comes in from another lane.
The second one [4-8] focuses its trials on:
1) Cooperative Manoeuvring, which aims at coordinating the trajectories of a group of
vehicles in close proximity by i) sharing information produced locally by a vehicle, e.g.,
from radar, Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR), and on-board cameras, in a privacy-
aware and secure fashion with other vehicles, and ii) combining vehicles’ information
with precise positioning and traffic information. The specific cooperative manoeuvre that
will be implemented is the Cooperative Lane Merging depicted in Figure 4.2, which was
previously tested by the 5GCAR project [4-2].
(urban mobility) for which it was designed, hence trigger the actions to avoid them. In summary,
for the simulated urban scenario and for a variety of realistic urban densities and speeds, the
algorithm is capable to avoid all collisions. In summary, this work demonstrated the compliance
of 5G with stringent automotive requirements in real and simulated scenarios for scalability [4-
15].
Across the different trials that are planned in the near future, one open technical question is the
nature and amount of validation with respect to functional safety requirements that will be
necessary before connected automated vehicles will be allowed on public roads by the governing
authorities. Industry associations like the 5G Automotive Association (5GAA) [4-16] have begun
to form working groups to liaise with the committees developing the relevant standards and
specifications like International Standards Organization (ISO) 26262 [4-17] and ISO Publicly
Available Specification (PAS) 21448 [4-18] which focus on issues of situational awareness and
practical approaches to validating the myriad scenarios that present themselves in connected and
automated driving.
Another important technical subject for the automotive vertical is cyber security and data
privacy. An overview of potential attack scenarios of the connected mobility is shown in Figure
4.5.
# Description of attack
1. Attacks on backend server. An attacker can compromise a backend server and use it to
attack the connected cars. An attacker may launch a Denial-of-Service (DoS) attack on
backend servers to disrupt the services. An attacker may target sensitive data at the
server or information in other parts of the cloud. For example, mobile apps are used to
allow a user to query the status and control the car from his/her smartphone. Insecure
application programming interfaces (APIs) at the backend allow an attacker to interact
with the car using falsified API requests.
2. Attacking a car using V2X communication channels. An attacker may spoof V2X
messages, tamper with transmitted data or code, attack data integrity, exploit the trust
relation, gain unauthorized access to data, jam the communication channel on the
protocol or radio frequency level and inject malware or malicious V2X messages. For
example, non-secure protocols such as HTTP are sometimes used for V2X
communications. Even when secure communication protocols such as Transport Layer
Security/Secure Socket Layer (TLS/SSL) are used, if the client software does not
properly check the server certificate, an attacker can launch a Man-in-the-Middle attack
to steal the user's credentials to further control the car.
3. Attacking a car by exploiting software update. An attacker may compromise the over-
the-air updates or local and physical software update process, manipulate the software
before the update process, or even steal cryptographic keys to compromise code signing.
For example, the 2014 Jeep Cherokee was remotely hacked by updating the Renesas
V850 firmware to allow the compromised telematics unit to send messages directly to
the electronic control units on the Controller Area Network (CAN) bus.
4. Social engineering exploits vulnerabilities and weaknesses introduced by human errors.
An attacker may trick an owner, operator, or maintenance engineer to unintentionally
install malware or change the setting to enable an attack. An attacker may also exploit
errors in system configuration or usage.
5. Attacking vehicle interfaces and functions for external connectivity. An attacker may
access and manipulate functions designed to remotely operate systems or provide
telematics data, short range wireless systems and sensors, and applications with poor
software security. An attacker may also utilize physical interfaces such as Universal
Serial Bus (USB) or diagnostic port, or even media connected to the car as a point of
attack. For example, connected cars rely on network devices with Transport Control
Protocol/User Datagram Protocol (TCP/UDP) ports to interact with the outside world.
Even the Internet Protocol (IP) address of a connected car is protected by network
separation provided by network operator, since open ports and services with weak or no
authentication pose security risks. An attacker can remotely scan and access the open
ports and exploit the services as an entry point to the on-board system. In addition, the
CAN bus can be accessed physically through the on-board diagnostics port, charging
station, or a mechanic's computer.
6. Attacks on in-vehicle network or software of on-board systems. An attacker may extract
data and code, manipulate vehicle data, erase data and code, inject malware, inject or
overwrite existing software, disrupt system operation, and manipulate vehicle
parameters.
7. Attacks that exploit security flaws in system design. An attacker may break the
encryption due to insecure cryptographic design such as lack of encryption, weak key
strength, or the use of deprecated cryptographic algorithms. Bugs in software and
hardware may provide the attacker exploitable vulnerabilities and means of access or
privilege escalation. Poor network design such as weakness in internet-facing ports and
internal network separation also pose security risks. Crypto systems in the car should
last for a long period of time. Lack of crypto agility, i.e. not being able to upgrade
broken or obsolete cryptographic systems over time, may affect the whole security
status.
8. Attacks on privacy or data loss and leakage. V2X communication packets may contain
identifiable information. Some of the information may be anonymized or
pseudonymized. However, an attacker may still be able to intercept the V2X packets,
footprint and track a car's movement over a certain period and area and re-identify the
user. Personal data may be transferred to third-party service providers in V2X
communications. Sensitive data from cars may be lost or leaked due to physical
damage, failure of Information Technology (IT) components, or change of ownership.
9. Physical manipulation of on-board systems to enable an attack. Manipulation of OEM
hardware or adding unauthorized devices may enable a remote attack afterwards.
A project in 5G PPP Phase 3 [4-19], will address security aspects of 5G, including the automotive
vertical among its main areas of work. Other research projects outside the 5G PPP (e.g. [4-20])
are also working towards a safe 5G technology for connected and automated mobility.
Beyond pure technical aspects of 5G, projects are also working on identifying and assessing new
business models and understanding the implications in regulations and standards. A techno-
economic analysis for three different automotive use cases: (i) assisted, (ii) cooperative, and (iii)
tele-operated driving can be found in [4-21] and [4-22]. The analyses conclude that all three use
cases actually do require a 5G network at least from a latency point of view. The question
investigated was which architecture with which functional split was most suitable from a cost
point of view. The study outcome complements the information provided by the 5G PPP
Automotive Working Group in its whitepapers [4-23] and [4-24].
Other projects have also contributed to the business implications of the use of 5G for the
automotive vertical. Still many open questions need an answer, such as what cooperation models
can be put in place to ensure a network deployment that can help leverage the potential of 5G-
enabled automated driving.
In summary, 5G PPP trials are demonstrating that 5G characteristics such as 5G NR, network
slicing, edge computing, location services and context awareness, softwarization, guaranteed
QoS, additional spectrum and coverage and intelligent security solutions will be key enablers for
autonomous driving.
4.1.2 Transportation
Transportation is another vertical industry that will benefit greatly from 5G networks. For
example, a study for the European Commission (EC) [4-25] that provided fundamental
quantitative socio-economic bases for the stakeholders to plan the critical phases for the
introduction of 5G concluded that the annual benefits arising from 5G capabilities for the road
transport industry are in excess of 8 billion Euro. This sector deals with the mobility of goods and
people. In this section we discuss the reported progress and the planned activities by 5G PPP
projects for the railway systems and the transportation with buses.
For the rail transport, it is expected that adopting the traditional model of separate dedicated
network infrastructures to support rail related services, will be very inefficient and of high cost.
Dedicated purpose cellular deployments installed along railway tracks suffer the following
shortcomings:
• For extended geographical areas there will be low or no traffic from other demands to
share the network capacity and associated cost.
• Traffic demands from trains are instantly high but moving fast between cells, creating
many inefficient handovers.
• The total cost of deploying and maintaining the traditional copper wire cables is
significant.
A multi-tenant 5G network model was demonstrated [4-26] that supports the needs of railways,
among other tenants, deploying converged wireless-optical network domains. Through the
proposed approach the railway industry will take advantage of the multi-tenant capabilities
exploiting network slicing that 5G offers, enabling the support of both traditional telecom
services available to the passengers and operational services required by the train operator. The
approach taken provides service continuity and guaranteed QoS along the tracks. In cases that
various RANs operated by different mobile network providers co-exist along a route, the solution
offers a unified network that can be deployed addressing service fragmentation issues, meaning
that mobile network providers are able to share assets between them, or they are provided
resources from different infrastructure providers [4-26].
A high-performance network model was trialled based on moving wireless access nodes on-board
trains connected to track via different vehicle to infrastructure (V2I) technology options [4-27].
The trial showed high-bandwidth internet access for infotainment and video streaming to the
passengers on the move, while providing train operators with driver-to-control connectivity and
access to on-board surveillance cameras applications. The project considered 20 - 100 Mbps
throughput per user and a radio network capacity of 1 - 3.5 Gbps. During the trials, the overall
system achieved data rates between 223 and 993 Mbps, a mean one-way latency of 2.35 ms (with
a minimum of 0.36 ms and a maximum of 17.4 ms), a residual packet loss rate (measured on TCP
retransmissions) of 0.06%. The supported mobility was 90 km/h and the power used was 199.5
W/km.
• A 100 Gigabit Ethernet (GE) aggregation network to protect and aggregate traffic
between mmWave poles and the core network.
• A network that can be implemented with full redundancy to support railway’s stringent
availability requirements.
5G PPP phase 3 projects [4-29] plan to demonstrate the use of 5G communications in railway
safety critical communications, between the level crossing train detector activation points and the
Level Crossing (LX) controller, as illustrated in Figure 4.7. In the presence of an approaching
train, messages indicating axle detection and axle count information are sent to the LX controller,
to inform that a train is approaching the level crossing as well to transmit the status of the
equipment on the track. The LX controller then starts a set of actions to assure safe conditions for
the train, cars and people. After detecting that the train has left LX, the peripheral devices must
return to normal state. Therefore, the LX controller gets the sensors’ information to
automatically define the position of the half-barriers, the traffic lights and the protection
signal. In this case, all communication between all LX equipment must be guaranteed. 5G is a
viable alternative to replace traditional copper wire cables and deploy safety communications
protocols to comply with railway signalling safety communications standards, ensuring
Reliability, Availability, Maintenance and Safety.
Figure 4.7: Safety critical communications for the train Level Crossing signalling system
Since this type of communication is considered critical, the most relevant requirements are related
to reliability, availability and low latency in order to support railway signalling operations
meeting railway level crossing communication requirements for safety critical communications
from approaching train detectors to the level crossing controllers.
The main requirement on 5G is low latency (<10ms) for ensuring timely train detection, and high
availability and reliability of 99.99% of the system to ensure all safety conditions and to ensure
that train rails and car roads are always mutually protected [4-30] [4-31].
In one of the recent 5G PPP projects [4-32], a joint use case is being designed and implemented
with the objective to increase safety and comfort for the citizens who travel by bus. The use
case provides the following main services to be implemented in the buses supported by a 5G ready
infrastructure:
• Infotainment services - displaying municipality information of public interest (e.g.,
surveys, alerts, tourist information, etc.). Video cameras and displays will be connected
to the traffic management centre of the private operator over 5G networks where input
from various stakeholders will be collected and transferred to the public transportation
passengers.
• Public safety critical service – all the buses will be equipped with surveillance cameras
identifying public threats (thefts/healthcare emergency/lost items) and allocating on the
spot the appropriate requested resources. Special attention will be given to the
transportation of children via school buses where additional services will be offered (e.g.,
face recognition to identify that a child is on board the bus, identification of unusual
behaviour, etc.)
The infotainment and public safety critical services will be supported by two different slices, the
slice for emergency will be created automatically by an event triggered by the driver or an external
event. Immediate service triggered instantiation must be achieved, the latency being a critical
metric for experimentation (5ms target), the low latency will provide the proper traffic delivery
for analytic processing at the 5G MEC, including also the needed device data rate to ensure the
video quality to the C&C centre, at 20 Mbps per device. The full list of KPIs is depicted [4-33].
All the above-mentioned examples from successful 5G PPP trials identify that the transport
section will benefit considerably from the use of advanced 5G solutions that indicatively include:
mobile edge computing, 5G NR (including RAN functional split), location services and context
awareness, guaranteed QoS and additional spectrum and coverage capabilities.
4.1.3 Media
The Media sector is one of the most promising consumer sectors which can benefit from 5G
networks as it is expected that 5G solutions will drastically increase bandwidth and reduce latency
thus increase media usage. The average monthly traffic per 5G subscriber will grow from 11.7
Gigabyte (GB) in 2019 to 84.4 GB per month in 2028, at which point video will account for 90%
of all 5G traffic [4-34].
Numerous market research reports forecast a rapid growth of video, often together with breath-
taking predictions for the rollout of next-generation wireless broadband. Ericsson’s Mobility
Report [4-35], predicts annual video traffic growth of 35% until 2024 – increasing from 27
exabytes (EB) per month in 2018 to 136 EB in 2024. Video’s share of the global mobile traffic
will rise to 74% from 60% today “as 5G establishes itself as the fastest generation of cellular
technology to be rolled out on a global scale” the reports states.
The European Technology Platforms, New Electronic Media and NetWorld2020 issued a joint
position paper [4-36], which considers nine use cases, covering a broad range of existing and
future media services. The paper identifies 12 KPIs, among others latency, reliability, data rate,
mobility, user density, positioning and user equipment speed that should be used to adapt the
network to the application requirements. The use cases identified by the position papers are:
1. Ultrahigh fidelity imaging for medical applications
2. Immersive and interactive media
3. Audio streaming in live productions
4. Remote, cooperative and smart media production incorporating user generated content
5. Professional content production
6. Machine generated content
7. Collaborative design including immersive communication
8. Dynamic and flexible ultra-high definition content distribution over 5G content delivery
networks
9. Smart education
Analysing the 5G network capabilities and KPIs that are needed to meet the requirements of the
listed use cases, the position paper concludes that two network slices with complementary
capabilities are needed. The reason for this is that the media production and delivery chain
encompass functionalities and operations such as content creation, service composition, service
aggregation, content distribution, devices capacities, user interaction and user interfaces, which
require very diverse network capabilities. As an example, content production mostly needs high
uplink capacity, while media distribution typically needs high downlink capacity.
The 5G media slices can be defined as subtypes of the eMBB slice type, which is meant for
applications requiring large capacity. However, elements of the other two slice types – latency
from URLLC and density from mMTC – must be taken into account, when required by the
specific media use cases.
In the context of the 5G PPP several projects have designed and validated solutions for the media
sector or are currently designing innovative services.
A solution for immersive on-site live experience (matching service 4 above) [4-12] targeted large-
scale event sites to provide better experience to fans (e.g., re-play, choose a specific camera,
language, add information through augmented reality etc.), including HD video. End-users were
able to request Ultra High Definition (UHD) in their media consumption through their user
devices. UHD media experience was available for linear (e.g. live programming, streaming) and
non-linear (e.g. on-demand) content.
The key service requirements were latency, data rate, and service creation time. The solution
demonstrated the use of 5G to deliver a high data rate streaming service to the fans, and the
capability to deploy the service at the network edge near the fans. Furthermore, it demonstrated
the instantiation and scaling of the service on demand with low service creation time.
The capability to deploy at the network edge, reduces the probability of a bottleneck in the
transport network and reduces the latency perceived by the fan. The capability to store content
locally at the network edge is critical to provide an immersive experience.
The solution was demonstrated on-site live at the golf event Mutuactivos Open España in October
2019 in Madrid. The trial illustrated in Figure 4.8 provided a 360° live video in a mobile player
with the capability to switch between two different streams provided by two 360° cameras placed
in two different locations of the training area. The player was able to see the 360° videos in Virtual
Reality (VR) mode using a Google Daydream View head mounted device.
Figure 4.8: Demonstration at the public golf tournament in Madrid in October 2019
The solution achieves latency of 40 ms on average for the client requesting the different video
segments. The measured data rate range between 19.27 Mbps and 35.23 Mbps, sufficient for UHD
experience. The total service creation time (i.e., the time required to provision a service, measured
since a new service deployment is requested until the overall orchestration system provides a
response of the service successfully provisioned) is in the range of a few minutes [4-15].
In a further project, Video Acquisition and Production for Live Events was tested and validated
[4-37]. It is common practice today for people to point their smartphones during events to the
stage recording it in video for later play and share. The broadcasting and live event production
world is aware that to achieve optimal user experience in an event, and increase its potential
revenues, platforms must be agile and designed to provide support for massive user engagement
meeting the experience provided by Facebook or YouTube. A mobile application was designed
and implemented that is capable of acquiring high quality video in an event (c.f. Figure 4.9) and
stream the acquired video and audio flows through a/the 5G Neutral Host platform [4-38],
to a designated central acquisition service capable of receiving multiple streams and dynamically
switching different video inputs based on the producer/director commands. The three core
components of this vertical application include a Media Controller which configures the various
media flows, a Media Switcher, which allows to select the main flow to stream in production, and
multiple Media Transcoders, which allow to homogenize encoding from variable sources and to
implement high quality media acquisition and subsequent transmission, adapted to the number of
attached devices. Target KPIs which make the scenario viable for an actual media production in
live events are reported in Table 4, together with the final measurement values.
Table 4: Video Acquisition & Production KPIs
The scenario has been trialled in Barcelona district @22 and in Bristol Millennium Square.
Dedicated network slices were configured through an orchestration platform which automatically
deployed the media service chain and regulated scale-out/-in of transcoders across the edge and
core virtual infrastructures. The dedicated network slice included an isolated RAN, made of Wi-
Fi and virtualised LTE-A radios. The key 5G functionalities for this use case are automatic
orchestration and scaling of virtualized network functions offered by the Network Function
Virtualisation (NFV) MANO framework [4-39].
5G is required for providing sufficiently high capacity to stream 4k/8k content to TVs in the
home, because existing TV streaming technologies such as digital video broadcast – second
generation terrestrial (DVB-T2) do not meet the capacity requirements. MEC capabilities
introduce intelligence in the streaming service that takes into account the knowledge about the
network state and residents’ context at the home gateway. Besides, MEC capabilities facilitate
additional service innovations to be provided by third party service providers. The main
performance indicators of this home use case are the delay and the video quality. In order to meet
these requirements, a web-based TV application is developed for Linux based 4K UHD TVs.
Using this application, TV users are able to display streaming video contents transmitted by a
Visible Light Communication (VLC) sender. Integration of the TV is handled by a VLC receiver
which is connected to the TV via an Ethernet port as shown in Figure 4.10.
Bit rate, tracking response and latency vary between VR headsets, applications and can be
subjective to individual users. Proposals for entry level VR, 2K*2K at 30 fps, would demand 100
Mbps and 30 ms latency, while advanced VR with 4K*4K at 60 fps would require 400 Mbps with
a maximum latency of 20 ms. Current tracking systems work with precision and accuracy in the
sub-millimetre range. Although the system supports latency of less than 1 ms on the air interface,
the position accuracy is 10 cm which is insufficient for the requirements of a VR headset and
needs improvement to less than 1mm.
Another 5G PPP Phase 2 project [4-48] investigated a use case about the “Remote and Smart
Production Pilot”. Project partners made a live event field test, by supporting the broadcast via
streaming from Cineteca de Matadero (Madrid) of the radio show La Radio es Sueño, organized
by Radio 3. The pilot took advantage of edge computing technology for live content production.
5G-MEDIA developments in terms of architecture and virtual network functions were able to
provide real-time bandwidth and low latency (10 frames) to support remote audio-visual
production. Three cameras, connected to the edge of Telefónica, by its current fibre network
from Matadero, captured the experience in situ while a technical team was responsible for the
realization from the Radio Televisión Española facilities in Torrespaña (Madrid) using a remote
interface for the realization of the content, and thus avoiding the displacement of a mobile unit
and the realization equipment.
The pilot showed the viability of new models of events coverage. The virtualized service
improved the current processes of television production, making them simpler and speeds up
response times to cover events. This is achieved by replacing the usual technical and human
deployment that television production entails through mobile units with the simple connection of
cameras and sound equipment directly to the edge. The solution maintains the optimum quality
and latency that conventional production requires, a very important factor, for example, in the
retransmission of sporting events. In this way, production is greatly simplified by making it
possible to perform it from a remote centralized point, thus avoiding large technical and human
deployments and achieving savings of more than 30%.
One of 5G PPP phase 3 projects [4-53] is currently investigating enhanced smart campus facilities
for innovative education experiences. The use of 5G mobile technologies can help to achieve
personalized education, with attractive, updated, and available content at any time and place.
Tactile applications with VR and Augmented Reality (AR) will play a crucial role in the quality
of education allowing immersive learning based on independent exploration. Mapping student
groups to different multimedia contents in a smart campus can dramatically increase the network
load. In this use case, the project LOCUS is focusing on the network management aspects
relying on localization. Location information and data analytics can be employed to achieve
smart network management, demonstrating dynamic allocation of resources (e.g., based on usage,
number of people in regions of interest) and/or improving network resilience (e.g., intelligent fault
detection and diagnosis, as well as actionable analytics and detection of problematic areas where
network events occur).
Last but not least, [4-54] is currently developing mechanisms to cope with increasing demand
in terms of data rates, number of simultaneous users connected and/or more stringent QoS
requirements. High quality and high-resolution audio-visual services are important drivers for
increased downlink data rates, where 5G promises to provide cost-effective alternatives to today’s
Content Delivery Network (CDN) approaches. The main use cases identified in this project are
the following:
• Ultra High-Fidelity Media;
• User & Machine Generated Content;
• Multi CDN selection;
Figure 4.12: Unauthorized Waste Dumping Prevention via 5GCity in Lucca, Italy
Table 6: Unauthorised Waste Dumping Prevention KPIs
A key 5G functionality deployed by this use case was the automatic orchestration of resources
at the edge and the possibility to allocate on the fly the various network services required for
the service within a City Security slice upon a shared virtualization infrastructure spanning from
sliced radio networks up to edge and core data centre.
Figure 4.13 presents details on all the time measurements for Slice Creation, Slice Activation,
Service Instantiation and Service and Slice Removal) that have been collected in the trial.
delay of less than 3 ms and minimal packet loss ratio of 2.5% for up to 262,144 devices. Therefore,
only four such OVS machines are required per square kilo meter to deal with 1 million devices
[4-58], fulfilling the requirements of the corresponding 5G mMTC KPI mentioned above.
As for most of the verticals, it is always important to evaluate the business case apart from the
technological one. [4-60] has provided a techno-economic analysis on the smart city scenario with
a focus on non-real-time-critical processes and logistics for dense urban and suburban areas
management. The applications are numerous, from traffic management, waste collection and
management, parking detection and information, to air monitoring. They are characterized by
small payloads and light constraints on latency.
The analysis on smart city IoT networks takes the 3GPP Release 15 NB-IoT and mMTC networks
as a baseline and looks into the cost elements for upgrading to Release 16. The software upgrade
needed is deemed to be free of deployment costs and also the existing macro cell network is
assumed sufficient to cover a large city like Paris.
The costs in terms of the required number of Physical Resource Blocks for this Release 16 IoT
network were calculated using traffic assumptions for 2020 and 2030, considering different Inter
Site Distances for the macro cells and focusing on the 700 MHz frequency band. The spectrum
requirement of roughly 1 MHz that represents about 5% of the total bandwidth allocated in the
700 MHz band for the macro cells. Medium frequency bands (between 2 and 6 GHz) should also
be allocated to 5G mMTC services. Considering the fact that 5G macro cells in Release 16 will
be supported by a dense underlay of small cells for eMBB 5G applications, releasing this amount
of spectrum is seen as manageable and also as a potential to increase the operator revenues by
better utilization of spectrum.
So, the project concluded that an upgrade for the NB-IoT and mMTC network from 3GPP
Release15 to Release 16 is viable, from a cost point of view since it will require only a software
upgrade and also from a spectrum point of view with roughly 5% of the total spectrum allocated
to mMTC services [4-21], [4-22].
Smart cities are expected to make significant use of the 5G capabilities to improve the life of the
citizens. 5G PPP projects have already demonstrated that there are viable business opportunities
that rely on network slicing, edge computing, advanced security schemes, the evolved NR
capabilities, the use of contextual information (e.g., location) and the provision of guaranteed
QoS.
4.1.5 Healthcare
The healthcare sector has undeniably a lot to benefit from 5G networks as these will enable a
number of innovative applications. As a first example, the [4-56] has designed, developed and
successfully demonstrated how the operation of an ambulance can be improved using 5G
networks. A 5G-connected eHealth ambulance can act as a high-speed mobile connection hub for
the emergency medical force comprising both paramedics staff and their on-board equipment and
wearables such as head cameras to allow on-board real-time video streaming of the patients to the
awaiting accident and emergency department team at the destination hospital, and optionally
shared with other specialists out of the hospital to help timely diagnosis and treatment on the
route. This use case will advance the emergency ambulance services by developing a 5G-enabled
collaborative ecosystem involving different healthcare stakeholders to save lives and help create
improved eHealth experiences and outcomes for both healthcare personnel including paramedics
and their colleagues, and also patients on the move.
This 5G eHealth Ambulance use case leverages network slicing with video optimizer VNFs and
machine learning based Telestroke VNFs as a service for the on-board real-time video streaming
and in-network optimization from a 5G-enabled ambulance to the hospital. The Telestroke VNFs
are deployed in the edge of 5G networks to allow timely diagnosis of potential stroke at a MEC
platform. The diagnosis results are communicated to the hospital, together with real-time video
streaming to allow effective remote treatment guidance for on-board patients in critical
conditions. In this use case, paramedics wear or hold a 5G user device to stream video to a doctor
in the hospital to perform a real-time patient assessment, assisted by the Telestroke VNF. In
addition, a set of videos can be simultaneously streamed and optimized by several video optimizer
VNFs deployed in the data plane of the 5G networks including the edge to ensure the quality of
the mission-critical video streaming.
This eHealth ambulance use case can be aligned with the 5G eMBB use case and thus, requires
broadband mobile communications. The KPIs defined for this use case include guaranteed
Quality of Experience of the streamed video for the remote doctors through network slicing, and
also significant bandwidth savings for numerous parallel video streams whilst maintaining the
QoE through video optimization VNFs.
Accordingly, two experimental sets of validation tests have been conducted in a lab-based setting.
In the first set of tests, the effectiveness of network slicing as provided in [4-56] in the data plane
was assessed [4-61]. Firstly, no network slicing was applied, and the video was streamed in a best
effort mode. When background traffic was increasing, the quality of the video streaming was
compromised and distortions were observed. Secondly, in this same situation, when E2E network
slicing was enabled for the video streaming, the perceived quality of the video was assured even
if the competing background traffic was still in place. This comparison as shown in Figure 4.15
has validated that this solution is able to meet the required QoE.
Figure 4.16: Empirical results on video optimization for bandwidth saving in a video-
based eHealth ambulance use case through VNFs
Another interesting example of an innovative health service has been developed and validated by
[4-12]. The use case is composed of users wearing a smart wearable device (e.g., smart shirt or
smart watch) with 5G connectivity (either directly or via a mobile phone) that can detect a
potential health issue (e.g., heart-attack, high blood pressure, etc.). The wearable periodically
reports the health status to a central server running on the cloud/edge. If the monitoring data shows
a potential issue/accident of the user, the central server issues an alarm to the wearable device so
the user can mark it as a false alarm, or the issue will be confirmed if there is no feedback within
a certain interval.
When an alarm is detected, the central server requests for an emergency team to be deployed at
the location of the user. This is possible because the Global Positioning System (GPS) location
of the user that had an accident is known, as well as the location of all available emergency teams.
Actually, since a lot of information is known about the accident (e.g., the recent story of medical
information from the user), the system can decide which is the best emergency team to deploy
(not only considering location, but also the needs of the accident). Note that this cannot be done
today, and much less in a fully automated way (i.e., with no human intervention). This cannot
be done with 4G either: (i) the mMTC and low power consumption characteristics of 5G are
required to assume the availability of remote monitoring capabilities, (ii) very low latencies
requiring dynamic deployment of services at the edge are needed to support the use of Augmented
Reality tools (described next).
Once an emergency is detected/predicted, an emergency team is sent to the location of the
emergency, automatically by the centralized eHealth server. In addition to this, the centralized
server also requests deployment of an edge service closer to the user (c.f. Figure 4.17). The edge
service is deployed to lower the latency and provide features to ambulances or patients (e.g.,
patient history, remote consultation, video streaming, AR/VR features etc.). Once the edge service
is deployed (on computing resources closer to the accident, meeting the required latency and
bandwidth constraints), the edge application establishes a connection to the user’s hospital,
obtaining the health records and establishes a connection with the emergency teams that are
involved in the emergency response. These teams can obtain the records from the edge service or,
in case it is needed, the paramedics can establish video stream connection to a medical specialist
(e.g., surgeon) located at a remote site (e.g., hospital far away from the emergency location) to
perform remote surgery or consultation through the edge service. The edge service can also be
used as video streaming hub to enable AR/VR applications supporting the emergency personnel
deployed (e.g., to guide the team to the actual location of the accident when it is not directly
reachable by vehicle and to show medical information in real time while treating the patient, thus
making the process more efficient and less error-prone).
SGW PGW
eHealth server
AR
googles 5G-TRANSFORMER platform
single NFV Infrastructure Point of Presence (NFVI-PoP); 4) the eHealth composite NFV-NS
instantiated over multiple NFVI-PoPs; 5) the eHealth composite NFV-NS instantiated using
service federation.
In addition to the quantitative evaluation, an actual demonstration of this full use case took place
on Nov. 27th at 5TONIC premises in Madrid. Real ambulances (from SAMUR_PC service of
Madrid City Hall) and firefighters (from Madrid City Hall) were involved using real 5G
equipment. The central eHealth server and the Packet Data Network Gateway (PGW) are
deployed at Centre Tecnològic Telecomunicacions Catalunya (CTTC) in Barcelona, while the
Signalling Gateway (SGW), radio access and the local virtual PGW and local eHealth server are
automatically deployed at 5TONIC in Madrid (i.e., at the edge, very close to the location of the
emergency), as triggered by the accident. A video of the demonstration event is available at [4-
64]. Additionally, an exploitation workshop, organized by the Emergency services of the City
Hall of Madrid took place on March 2nd, 2020.
Additional use cases for medical services are under development in 5G PPP as described at [4-
41] and [4-63]. The first one considers the presence of at least one doctor in the ambulance, who
is required to make a call to a regulator in the emergency care centre to discuss patient status and
decide on clinical interventions. In addition, a medical specialist such as a cardiologist may be
consulted in specific cases. The ambulance doctor may be able to correctly position the probe to
acquire echocardiograms of sufficient diagnostic quality. However, he may still be dependent on
an additional medical specialist (e.g., Cardiologist) to assist in diagnosing the data properly. This
use case requires specific settings that will be provided by 5G network. High reliability and low
latency communication will be required for eye-hand coordination in case of tele-sonography
examinations based on video, AR/VR and/or remotely controlled robotic ultrasound probes.
Bandwidth requirements are also foreseen to support 4K video streaming for remote (doctors at
hospital site) patient monitoring. In addition to that, interaction with vertical providers require a
5G network. The project provides a solution for teleguidance of a paramedic in the ambulance to
support diagnosis and intervention for medical emergencies. Furthermore, it provides the
Xperteye smart-glass solution, enabling the sharing of first-person point-of-view camera feeds
with the medical personnel at the hospital. Speeds above 100 Km/h, 2 Gbit/s for UHD multi-
camera video streams from hospital to paramedic treating the patient and high-resolution
streaming from the ultrasound probe at the paramedic to the remote expert(s) in the hospital will
be supported. The target for latency is below 10 ms and the target for reliability will be greater
than 99.999%.
The second use case is related to the operation of an ambulance by providing an optimal
ambulance routing. While optimal ambulance positioning and routing has been addressed
extensively from a decision-making perspective, the emergence of technologies such as 5G
actually enable the fast and reliable acquisition of data. This is of significant importance with
respect to the changing factors of an urban or sub-urban environment such as traffic flow,
changing road graph, population mobility, and hospital capabilities and availability as well 5G
coverage to be exploited by AI powered decision making for dynamic optimal ambulance routing.
Latency problems may affect the decision of the Hospital Operations Centre in which hospital's
dispatch centre should be selected in order to send the ambulance based on the patient's condition,
as well as other parameters such as traffic, 5G coverage, road closures etc. As the ambulance is
moving with high speed it is essential to support these mobility requirements in order to provide
as seamless service as possible. Last but not least, location accuracy could also affect the routing
as well as the ambulance driver’s perception of the location and where to head based on the system
recommendations. This could also affect the time to reach the destination which is a crucial
parameter when carrying a patient that needs to be transported in a hospital immediately.
Reliability, latency and location accuracy related KPIs are of utmost importance in this scenario.
More specifically, the main requirements to be validated for this use case are: (i) low latency
(<10ms E2E), (ii) Mobility (up to 100Km/h), and (iii) reliability and availability (above 99.99%).
A third use case is related to health monitoring and emergency situation notification. This use
case addresses solutions for remote health monitoring of people, especially when already
diagnosed with a critical disease. Such a solution includes consultation with remote medical
attendants, collaboration between remote and local medical personnel and leveraging advanced
technology to detect medical conditions that require immediate attention. The main features
offered by this use case involve (a) remote health monitoring services leveraging a variety of data
sources, and (b) quick, reliable notifications to nearby ambulances, medical professionals and
family members. The use case will leverage wearable devices and patches tracking a person’s
vital signs and having them aggregated inside an IoT-based platform; Figure 4.19 outlines the
planned architecture.
in Figure 4.22. Requirements of AE traffic streams are depicted in Table 7. These data streams
impose high uplink bandwidth requirements on the communication link. In addition to this, the
5G system also needs to provide deterministic low latency to react in a timely manner on the
detection of critical events, such as, e.g. tool break. Additionally, time synchronization is required
between the AE sensor and the machine it is operated in, in order to align the sensor data to, e.g.
a certain position on the workpiece for advanced process diagnostics.
For the TSN/industrial LAN use case periodic and symmetric data traffic is observed between
industrial controllers. One of the key features here is to have network slicing to support
transporting multiple TSN streams with different QoS requirements over the same
communication platform. Considering different requirements of the TSN streams of high
availability and security, network slicing features is more suitable compared to LTE QoS classes.
Looking at the wide applications areas covered by these use cases, it is observed that the
performance, functional and operational requirements imposed on the 5G system vary widely,
which cannot be fully satisfied by the LTE. For example, most of the use case requires
deterministic latency along with time synchronization which only 5G can support. Moreover,
edge cloud and network slicing are also essential enablers.
[4-53] is currently investigating many use cases for the factory of the future. One of these is
related on the flexibility required by production in Industry 4.0 and deep automation of seaport
activities that require the massive introduction of Automated Guided Vehicles (AGVs) that
depend on accurate and real-time localization to achieve high accurate navigation (centimetric
in some scenarios). In particular, in factory 4.0 the position accuracy required for AGV can range
from some dozens of centimetres, when moving between work cells, to a few centimetres when
the AGV has to interact with precision robotic arms. In seaport outdoor logistics (c.f. Figure 4.23),
the position accuracy required by AGVs shuttling freights between storage and loading areas is
less than 1 meter. 5G features together with multi-RAT integration can provide such accurate
location analytics to replace magnetic floor tapes, LIDAR, and camera sensors used nowadays
for AGV navigation. After analysis of the results and data obtained by relevant studies and test
activities, the behaviour of a simulated AGV in industrial logistics cases will be analysed to
evaluate the accuracy required by the different cases and the sensitivity to the 5G positioning
system accuracy tolerance. The use cases that will be simulated will be (i) a warehouse where the
AGV will shuttle materials between different locations, and (ii) an assembly line where the AGV
will replace a conveyor.
5G networks can increase the productivity in smart factories. The currently active projects are
developing solutions that among other 5G features are relying in smart slicing, edge computing,
the enhanced 5G NR capabilities, advanced security, location and context awareness mechanisms
as well guaranteed QoS.
4.1.7 Energy
Power distribution networks oversee transporting high-voltage power lines from the power
generation plants to the power substations, located closer to the consumers, where high-voltage
power lines are transformed to low-voltage lines. These are critical infrastructures providing the
electricity that we all consume at home every day. Any failure along the transportation network
will cause an imminent power interruption. Thus, automated solutions or real-time support of
operators and crews dispatched in the field are of paramount importance.
[4-56] has dealt with the support of sophisticated self-healing protocols that are already present
in the power distribution network in order to avoid any power interruption caused by short-
circuits, malfunctions, natural disasters, animals and so on. These mission-critical self-healing
protocols rely on high-quality underlying communication infrastructure to function in a reliable
and real-time manner. The self-healing capabilities are based on the detection of the malfunction
in a given segment of the power line and the automatic reconfiguration of the power network to
redirect the power to other routes not affected. Thus, assuming that power is transported close to
speed of light and that our current power lines are working at 50-60 Hz on alternate electricity. It
means that a complete alternate cycle is happening 50 times in a second, i.e., 16-20 msec. In order
to detect problems in the network, a solution needs to perform 4 different measurements along a
given cycle, leading to very strict URLLC requirements around 4-5 ms, and these values need
to be transmitted to the next hop of the power grid before the next cycle reading, to allow the self-
healing capabilities to be enforced, leading to an effective maximum 4-5 ms delay. To address
such demanding requirements, hardware-accelerated network slicing technologies over the 5G
edge and core network segments have been provided to demonstrate the feasibility of using the
5G network to truly isolate the critical traffic used for the Smart Grid from the traffic that is being
generated for other users of the public network.
This smart grid self-healing use case can be aligned with the 5G URLLC use case and thus,
requires ultra-reliable low-latency communication. The KPIs defined for this use case include
guaranteed low latency and low packet loss ratio through hardware-accelerated network
slicing [4-67]. To validate the solution in respect to the above URLLC requirements, experimental
tests have been carried out in a lab setting. Figure 4.24 shows empirical results where four
different slices were deployed over the same physical infrastructure in the network segment
between the edges of the 5G network and the core network. Slices are ordered by priority. Thus,
the first slice, with the least priority, has background user traffic corresponding to final users of
the 5G network. The second slice is for the Smart Grid management traffic used to send
information from the power distribution network to the Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
(SCADA) systems. The data is used to control and monitor in real time the status of the network.
The third slice is for the ultra-reliable Smart Grid control traffic used to implement the self-healing
capabilities of the power grid. And finally, the fourth slice, with the highest priority, is used to
deliver the 5G infrastructure control traffic ensuring that the control of the 5G communication
network is already protected. The first slice is the traffic of 32 simulations users, the second and
third slices correspond to the traffic of 32 power distribution units and the fourth slices
corresponds to 32 simulations communication devices. A total of 28.8 Gbps was sent over a 10
Gbp network link creating high stressed conditions to demonstrate the suitability of network
slicing to protect the self-healing capabilities of the power grid. The rest is traffic coming from
the final users of the 5G network. As highlighted in the inset of the results, all the three
prioritized slices guaranteed the quality of the corresponding services in terms of both low
delay of under 0.3 ms and low packet loss ratio of under 0.3% in this saturation traffic condition.
Figure 4.24: Empirical results of guaranteed QoS in a smart grid use case through
network slicing
[4-56] has successfully demonstrated guaranteed QoS in terms of low latency and high reliability
for mission-critical applications through hardware-accelerated network slicing. In addition, it has
developed a machine learning-based network failure/faults prediction algorithm to further
improve the reliability of the 5G communication infrastructure.
One of the new 5G PPP projects [4-30] targets to assist the remote operator and the crews
dispatched in the field to better assess the severity and the impact of the outage they are facing
while heading to the substation and once on-site. From the local surveillance systems available in
the secondary substation, an HD video signal must be streamed, and monitoring assets, i.e.,
sensors and meters, should communicate in nearly real-time to the control centre and to the mobile
devices of the maintenance crew. These data will be incorporated into an Augmented Reality
application running in the mobile devices of the crew. Sensors and meters will monitor the status
of fuses or low voltage feeders. Furthermore, the Low Voltage substation controller will aggregate
transformer measures and will concentrate all the information from the substation and low voltage
network. Once again the requirements of this critical infrastructure from the underlying 5G
networks are related to low latency (Round-trip Time – RTT< 5 ms) to ensure the timely
collection of energy monitoring data, and the high bandwidth at high Data Rate (mobility) (100
Mbps at 120 Km/h) required to ensure that high quality video can be streamed to the maintenance
staff when travelling using a car. Reliability and availability should be above 99.99%.
Last but not least, in another 5G PPP Phase 3 project [4-32] Orange Romania develops together
with Alba Iulia Municipality a joint use case for smart energy metering solution exploiting 5G
mMTC capability. The solution will be able to collect real-time data from relevant end points
scattered across the city of Alba Iulia, providing several key capabilities:
• Faster power reconnection after outages, and more cost-effective measures across smart
metering Alba Iulia Municipality facilities;
• Electric power quality monitoring for fault management and SLA infringement;
• Predictive and proactive maintenance;
• On-the-fly reporting and analysis for both consumption and generation.
An e2e service framework will be developed over a 5G infrastructure assuring the E2E
management, control and orchestration of the slice. The scenario assumes metering data
collection from endpoints connected over LTE-M/5G-NR access layer, scattered across a city
having up to 10k devices per km2 as it is an mMTC use case. The collected measurements will
be transferred to the central cloud facilities that will be responsible for hosting, processing and
analysing the collected measurements. The use case also implements advanced analytics
capabilities in order to predict future demands and create incentives for citizens to reduce overall
power consumption. Besides the high density of endpoints envisioned, the full list of KPIs can be
found in [4-33].
In the context of the 5G PPP several solutions have demonstrated or are in the process to be
validated in the vertical domain of energy. 5G networks appear to provide significant
enhancements with the use of network slicing, the enhanced 5G NR capabilities, smart network
management solutions and guaranteed QoS of services.
(travellers, airport staff etc.) in an efficient and safe manner, while at the same time have in place
the relevant plans, tools and processes required to mitigate any emergency. Efficient and effective
evacuation is one of the mitigation measures that are of particular importance in security incidents
or even in the case of fire, gas leakage, etc.
The evacuation use case is in principle a representative example that falls within URLLC service
type. In this case there are strict requirements to ensure a high reliability level. A more powerful
RAN is expected to achieve high reliability, with diversity mechanism considered in frequency
or in spatial domain. This is because the strict requirements in latency enforce that a URLLC
transmission should be localized in time. Generally, URLLC service type differs a lot from eMBB
in terms of target specifications and this heterogeneity imposes the need for a fundamental re-
design of traditional network components and architectures.
The localization capabilities offered by 5G will assist in obtaining real-time data from the
emergency environment which is to be evacuated, such as numbers of occupants within the area,
persons trapped in isolated areas of building and in regard to the real-time flow management of
evacuees. In addition to the cost reductions that the 5G network can bring to verticals, reliability,
latency and location accuracy related KPIs are of utmost importance in an evacuation scenario.
More specifically, the main requirements are: (i) low latency (<10 ms E2E), (ii) Location accuracy
(<1 m), and (iii) reliability and availability (above 99.99%).
The deployment of such systems needs also their evaluation in terms of the expected cost. [4-60]
has performed a techno-economic analysis for ad-hoc airborne (e.g., drones 0.5 - 1km) and/or
high-altitude platforms (8 - 20km) for disaster and emergencies. In this study different cases were
considered either with only drones or drones complemented by a high-altitude platform (HAP).
While the emergency services can be deployed using LTE, they can benefit hugely from the
advanced capabilities that 5G networks are promising to unleash, from the very high data rates
in eMBB services to the ultra-reliability and extreme low latencies in URLLC services. 5G offers
new opportunities for the development of innovative communication, surveillance and remotely
operable robotic solutions in this domain.
The expected services from these air-borne platforms can be defined under the categories below—
where the system parameters and KPIs are presented in [4-73]:
1. Low data rate broadcast messaging from HAPs (Down-Link – DL)
2. Low data rate response messaging, voice calls from a very large number of User
Equipment – UEs (Up-Link – UL)
3. Some basic URLLC and eMBB direct support from the HAPs.
4. UHD/AR/VR maps, videos from/to emergency service personnel in drone
communications (UL/DL)
The techno-economic analysis was assuming a drone network in single or multi-hop
configuration: the drones provide the network access links while using existing public networks
for backhaul, occupying part of the public spectrum for some time.
The study contains a cost sensitivity analysis for the optimum number of drones per wireless link,
taking into consideration parameters like the drone unit cost and the link capacity factor. These
cost sensitivity analyses provided different ‘sweet spots’ in terms of the number of drones RRHs
to be operated per wireless link for the different drone unit costs and capacity levels considered.
The spectrum analysis on the impact of allocating 25% of the commercial spectrum ‘on
demand’ for this emergency deployment looked at the likely proliferation of 5G small cells in
the early stages (up to 5 years). The impact on the commercial network is found to be minimal in
the commercial (business) areas, while the residential areas see more impact, but the capacity
penalty is seen as highly manageable. The results of the techno-economic evaluation are publicly
available [4-21] [4-22].
Public protection and disaster relief application and services require the fast and dynamic re-
configuration of network resources along with higher capacities that only 5G NR can offer. For
public safety, 5G PPP projects have also explored the benefits that novel security and advanced
localization schemes could bring in this vertical sector.
• The flexibility of virtualized 5G network architectures means that network resources can
be used more efficiently, reducing network over-dimensioning. The analysis for the
Steinwerder cruise ship terminal showed that the costs of providing a dedicated small cell
network to serve temporary hotspots for passengers could be reduced by between 38%
and 68% due to this flexibility.
Figure 4.25: Hamburg Smart Sea Port testbed schematic setup, Tollerort container
Terminal and Steinwerder cruise ship terminal
A Phase 3 5G PPP project, is currently developing solutions for airports ([4-41] [4-72]). Already
such a solution for an emergency airport evacuation has been described in subsection 4.1.8 (Public
safety). Additionally, a smart parking management application and a video-enhanced ground-
based moving vehicles service is being developed.
For the first application the Athens International Airport parking areas will be equipped with 5G-
supporting parking occupancy sensors providing a real view on the parking availability status of
the overall area. The main objective of this use case is to provide a solution that will enable the
airport car park users to quickly identify a suitable parking place, saving time and energy,
reducing emission and increasing passenger satisfaction. Covering a pre-defined parking area
with low-rate sensors that generate small payloads in the UL is the way to go. The sporadic nature
in UL/DL communication and the operators’ requirement for quick machine type
communications network deployment and expansion make the 5G network as a suitable core
network for such use case. Reliability and location accuracy related KPIs are of utmost
importance in this scenario. More specifically, the main requirements are: Reliability 99,999%
and location accuracy <5 m.
As for the second use case, working with the airport authorities it was identified that the operations
of the Airport’s Apron need to be efficient and effective towards providing Follow-Me service to
an aircraft, responding to emergencies, as well as maintaining a safe environment for all
concerned users of the Apron. 5G technologies are provided via the installation of HD cameras
on the Follow-Me vehicles with live video feeds to not only the airport services operations centre
but also to other concerned third parties and stakeholders. This will most certainly expedite the
response to aircraft during arrival and departure from parking positions, which will avoid flight
delays, for emergencies as they occur, and when responding to such matters as fuel spillages.
Overall this will positively benefit the safety of the Apron Area.
Within the context of this use case, the airport’s Follow-Me vehicles will be enhanced with mobile
units equipped with HD cameras; the scenario will demonstrate how live video feeds sent to the
AOCs (Airport Operations Centre) and other stakeholders improve both day-to-day airport
operations and response activities to emergencies.
This use case falls within eMBB service type. eMBB is a natural evolution to existing 4G
networks that aims to provide Gbps data rates, and therefore a better user experience than current
mobile broadband services. The demanding scenario of sharing live video feeds with high rate
(and resolution), while moving with moderate speed makes the trial even more challenging and
hence offers the opportunity to draw useful conclusions. Indicative QoS parameters to be
considered are video quality, video disruption statistics, start-up delay (the duration elapsed from
making the content request and the start time of the video playback), and latency in live streaming
that refers to the time gap between the true progress of the event being streamed and what is being
played back at the user device side.
Ports and airports are complex operational environments where multiple stakeholders execute
complex tasks. 5G features such edge computing and location accuracy services enable the
development of innovative applications and services, network slicing enables the coexistence of
these innovative applications on the same network infrastructure with different QoS, thus,
invoking the economies of scale, and flexible deployment of network functions enables the
efficient use of network computing, communication and memory storage resources. It has been
already demonstrated and proved that the deployment of 5G networks will be an enabler for cost
reduction and service performance enhancements.
4.1.10 Tourism
Tourism is a very important economic sector in Europe. Several European cities are among the
most visited cities in the world. 5G as a disruptive technology will be one of the new technologies
that will change global tourism’s development. In order to demonstrate how 5G can affect
tourism, a phase 3 5G PPP project [4-40] will demonstrate 5 use cases under the touristic city
node. The touristic city node is based in the beautiful Italian city of Turin. It comprises a set of
use cases that aim at improving the touristic experience at a city by providing visitors with (i)
added value services within the visited touristic attractions, and (ii) media applications to
complement their visit. In particular, some of the use cases addressed under this theme are centred
on a museum, providing AR/VR applications as well as a robot that serves as a guide and allows
for remote visits. An additional use case addresses media distribution and production, providing
visitors with digital content to complement their visit and improve the visitors’ experience. More
specifically 5G-TOURS will deal with the following use cases [4-41] [4-42]:
1. Augmented tourism experience: It will provide museum visitors with an improved
experience based on Extended Reality. Extended Reality (XR) is the umbrella term that
includes VR, AR, and Mixed Reality (MR).The goal is to use all these technologies in a
seamless way to provide users with the best possible experience, according to each user’s
hardware, location, network capacity, and needs.
2. Telepresence: The main application of this use case is to enable a visit to the museum by
a visitor located at a remote station or the surveillance of the museum by an operator
external to the museum. For this service a robot located inside the museum will be used.
3. Robot-assisted museum guide and monitoring: In this use case, a robot is deployed inside
the museum and has a map of the environment enriched with the location of the main
attractions. Visitors interact with the robot, asking information on what they can see and
where. The robot can physically guide the visitors to the required attraction.
4. High quality video distribution: This use case targets the distribution of enhanced high-
quality video services for tourists providing immersivity functionalities to the user
experience. Immersivity lies in providing the user with additional content related to the
surrounding environment (in the form of text, pictures and video on the monuments,
objects in a museum, etc.) by using smartphones and/or HoloLens-like devices. These
can be automatically retrieved for example from TV archives. In order to support such a
user experience, images of the city captured by the users’ device cameras are sent to a
remote server (via the 5G network infrastructure).
These use cases need a combination of network slices with specific network requirements. For
example, the first use case requires all three slice types (i.e., eMBB, URLLC and mMTC) as it
requires implementing new XR applications using VR glasses, MR headsets and haptic gloves on
top of 5G. These applications will be implemented by Samsung media and ATOS media, and the
solutions provided will be integrated with Samsung’s mobile terminals.
For the second use case, eMBB and URLLC slices are required. Novel software integrating a VR
headset with hand trackers will be developed, which will both be used to control the movements
and vision of the robot. The communication between the remote visitor and the robot will take
place over a 5G network. The application will be developed using Ericsson’s infrastructure, and
will be used towards future robotic products.
The third use case requires the development of software applications for exploiting the use of
robots at the museum. In particular, the robots will need to be provided with enhanced intelligence
to respond to visitors’ queries, guide them, and warn them when a safety violation happens. The
latency needed for such applications can be provided by 5G networks.
The last use case requires the use of service type eMBB provided by 5G networks. It also requires
edge computing equipment for fast server processing. The use case will generate broadcasting
applications for distributing immersive contents to a large number of users, where part of the
content needs to be personalized and there is also information being delivered by the user in the
uplink.
All the above use cases require network services only 5G networks can offer. For example, the
latency for most of them should be less than 10 ms which may also require the usage of edge
computing. As for the throughput, the requirements of the services vary from 25 to 500 Mbps.
These rates cannot be easily supported for a significant number of end users like the visitors of a
museum.
Applications and services related to tourism have also a lot to benefit from the usage of 5G
networks. Edge computing and location accuracy services enable the development of innovative
applications and services that cannot be supported by legacy cellular networks, whilst network
slicing enables the coexistence of these innovative applications on the same network
infrastructure with different QoS, thus, invoking the economies of scale, and flexible deployment
of network functions enables the efficient use of network computing, communication and memory
storage resources.
4.1.11 Agrifood
The Food sector is expected to benefit a lot from the introduction of new Information and
Communication Technologies (ICT) and especially the services offered by 5G networks. For
example, aquaculture production is strongly characterized by the need for continuous monitoring
and management of the site with the goal of optimizing production and fish welfare. There is an
increasing trend for continuously including new technologies to cover these needs, including
multi-sensor monitoring of water quality as well as image/video footage to monitor the
infrastructure and the fish stocks themselves for extracting information that traditionally comes
from manual observations or not at all, due to insufficient network solutions. Additionally,
the context of the 5G PPP Programme providing end-to-end testing capabilities to vertical
industries to validate a wide variety of use cases on a 5G network.
https://5gdrones.eu/
https://5gheart.org/
http://5growth.eu/
https://5gsmart.eu/
https://www.5gsolutionsproject.eu/
http://5gtours.eu/
https://www.5g-victori-project.eu/
Figure 4.27 Support of vertical related projects by the three platform projects
The key capabilities, the provided services, the corresponding locations per project and the
timeline of the trials are highlighted in Table 8. Note that the exact support and timing for each
individual capability may vary from one site to another.
INTERWORKING Interworking with other Projects Builds upon ETSI NFV principles Turin, Madrid, Oslo, Martlesham, Patras, Athens, Malaga, Surrey
Paris, Athens Madrid 2020
2020 2020 in phases
EDGE COMPUTING Edge Computing 3GPP Release 16: Turin, Madrid, Oslo, Patras, Athens, Berlin,
TS 23.501, TS 23.502 Paris, Athens, Madrid, Aveiro, Limassol,
Rennes and Martlesham Malaga, Surrey
Nice 2020 (TBD) 2020 2020
BACKHAUL Millimeter wave for Backhaul IEEE 802.11ad or IEEE 802.11ay TBD Patras Berlin, Surrey
2020 2020
Satellite for Backhaul 3GPP: TS 22.261, TR N/A Luxembourg, Surrey 2019,
22.819, TR 22.822, TR Nomadic (Rapid Response Limassol
23.737, TR 28.808, TR Vehicle – RRV), 2020
38.811, TR 38.821 / ETSI: Oslo 2020
TR 103 611 / ECC Report
280 / ITU-R: M.2460-0
VALIDATION Automatic Testing Framework for ITU-R M.2083-0 Turin, Madrid, Oslo, Martlesham, Patras, Athens, Berlin, Limassol,
KPI Validation ITU-R M.2410-0 Paris, Athens, Madrid Malaga, Surrey
3GPP TS 28.51 Rennes and 2020 2020
5G PPP Test Monitoring and Nice 2020
Validation Work Group
Note that slice customization refers to different features (e.g. customized service function chaining, security, enhanced cloud access, monitoring as a service, hosting
3rd party VNF, specialized data analytics for IoT, etc.). Also, Interworking refers to the capability to execute one service E2E, involving at least two different
infrastructures or platforms.
4.3 References
[4-1] SAE J3016, Taxonomy and Definitions for Terms Related to Driving Automation Systems
for On-Road Motor Vehicles, Jun 2018, Online:
https://saemobilus.sae.org/content/j3016_201806
[4-2] 5GCAR: Fifth Generation Communication Automotive Research and innovation, Online:
http://www.5gcar.eu/
[4-3] 5GCAR Deliverable 2.1, 5GCAR Scenarios, Use Cases, Requirements and KPIs, 2017,
Online: http://5gcar.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/5GCAR_D2.1_v2.0.pdf
[4-4] 5GCAR Deliverable 1.3, 5GCAR Final Project Report, 2019, Online: https://5gcar.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2019/08/5GCAR_D1.3_v1.0.pdf
[4-5] 5GCAR White Paper, 5GCAR: Executive Summary, 2019,Online: https://5gcar.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2019/12/5GCAR-Executive-Summary-White-Paper.pdf
[4-6] 5GCAR Final Demonstration, 2019, Online:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=2&v=bSlf2kNczMw&feature=emb_logo
[4-7] 5GCroCo: 5G Cross-Border Control, Online: http://5gcroco.eu/
[4-8] 5G-CARMEN: 5G for Connected and Automated Road Mobility in the European union,
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Orchestration, Online: https://www.etsi.org/deliver/etsi_gs/NFV-
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http://5gtours.eu/
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high level description, Online: http://5gtours.eu/documents/deliverables/D2.1.pdf
[4-42] 5G-TOURS Deliverable D4.1 Robotic, Media and Smart Cities solutions for Touristic
Cities, Online: http://5gtours.eu/documents/deliverables/D4.1.pdf
[4-43] IoRL: Internet of Radio Light, Online: https://iorl.5g-ppp.eu/
[4-44] Kareem Ali, Nawar Jawad, Benjamin Meunier, John Cosmas “IoRL Real-Time Video Lan
Client Player Streaming through SDN Network " Accepted in IEEE BMSB, Paris Oct 2020
[4-45] Ben Meunier, John Cosmas, Nawar Jawad, Kareem Ali “Realising a new generation of 5G
VR systems through Internet of Radio Light" Accepted in IEEE BMSB, Paris Oct 2020
[4-46] J. Cosmas, B. Meunier, K. Ali, N. Jawad, M. Salih, Y. Zhang, Z. Hadad, B. Globen, H.
Gokmen, S. Malkos, M. Cakan, H. Koumaras, A. Kourtis, C. Sakkas, D. Negru, M. Lacaud,
Moshe Ran, Einat Ran, J. Garcia, W. Li, L-K Huang, R. Zetik, K. Cabaj, W. Mazurczyk,
Xun Zhang, A. Kapovits “A 5G Radio-Light SDN Architecture for Wireless and Mobile
Network Access in Buildings” IEEE 5G World Forum, Santa Clara, California, USA, 9-11
July 2018.
[4-47] Ben Meunier, John Cosmas “5G Internet of Radio Light Virtual Reality System” IEEE
International Symposium on Broadband Multimedia Systems and Broadcasting, June 5th –
8th 2018, Valencia, Spain DOI: 978-1-5386-4729-5/18/$31.00 ©2018 IEEE
[4-48] 5G Media project, Online: http://www.5gmedia.eu/
[4-49] 5G SMART 5G for smart manufacturing project, Online: https://5gsmart.eu
[4-50] 5G-SMART, Deliverable D1.1, Forward looking smart manufacturing use-cases,
requirements and KPIs, July 2020
[4-51] 5G-SMART, Deliverable D3.2 Report on system design options for monitoring of
workpieces and machines, June, 2020.
[4-52] 5G-SMART, D2.1, Design on 5G-based testbed for industrial robotics, June, 2020.
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[4-55] 5GCity project, Online: https://www.5gcity.eu/
[4-56] SLICENET project, Online: https://slicenet.eu/
[4-57] MATILDA and SLICENET use case, Online:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjtUv99kXOo
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Supporting One Million Rules for 5G NB-IoT Networks”, Proc. IEEE ICC 2020, Dublin,
Ireland, June 2020.
[4-59] 3GPPP, Study on positioning use cases, Stage 1, release 16, 09-2018
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[4-61] UWS B5G Hub, Online: http://beyond5ghub.uws.ac.uk/index.php/ehealth-ambulance/
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5G Networks," IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management, doi:
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5g-acia.org
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Industry: Primary use cases, functions and service requirements, White Paper, July 2019,
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Network Slicing for Supporting Smart Grids Self-healing over 5G Networks", Proc. IEEE
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Levels, Online:https://www.psc-europe.eu/library/psce-policy-papers/critical-
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evaluation, Online: https://one5g.eu/wp-
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sheer number of requests, or because the LB-APA does not monitor the number of failed/rejected
connections appropriately [5-4].
With respect to the runtime results of these five monitoring indicators, the constrained LB-APA
optimisation problem converges towards maximising the overall system throughput (maximum
of 5 Gbit/sec), user QoE (15 users of minimum QoS of 0.3 Gbit/sec experience >5 msec delay
when switching networks) and fairness index (an average of 0.97 Jain’s index, where absolute
fairness is achieved when index reaches the value of 1).
Moreover, innovative solutions have been provided for multiple-source streaming over remote
radio light heads. This is essentially a multiple-path streaming system that has been implemented
increasing both reliability and QoE of the streaming sessions. In this system, the client is used to
retrieve video packets in high quality through a VLC/mmWave network and simultaneously in
low quality through a Wireless LAN (WLAN) access to provide reliability in case of an
interruption in the data transmission. When retrieved, the requested sub-streams are merged in
order to reconstruct and display the original requested content quality. In the event of sub-streams
loss or outdated delivery, content playback continuity is not affected, only image quality.
Additionally, if the considered network paths experience outages or throughput degradation, the
Maximum Segment Size (MSS)/RRLH client relies on multiple paths content-adaptation
mechanisms to avoid QoE degradation.
The results show that MSS/RRLH can reliably support a live stream within a 3-5 seconds end-to-
end delay with a higher average video bitrate and significantly less stalling events than other
players.
The security VNF was deployed to discover machines that are sniffing in the network (i.e., they
have NICs set to the promiscuous mode). Our approach is based on the macof and ping tools and
it relies on inflicting artificial load on the investigated machine and measuring its RTT with and
without the load. The performed experimental evaluation proved that such an approach is
effective [5-7].
The service provider for this localisation service would enter into an agreement with the
emergency services to meet the necessary accuracy, reliability and service availability criteria
enabled by 5G. This use case requires that the devices with victims and emergency crew will be
5G-NR compliant, and that the gNBs in the vicinity and any ad-hoc gNBs can be quickly
configured to collaborate.
Performance indicator requirements on the 5G networks:
• Localization accuracy: Horizontal ±2m; Vertical ± 1m
• Security and privacy need to be very high
• Maximum update interval = 40 s
• Initial service setup time = 135 s
• Service level reliability 99.9%
• Service level availability 98%
regarding the involved components, VNFs, topology and so on in a concerned network slice.
Various levels of monitoring, control and management are defined and can be specified by a
vertical, subject to the SLA between the vertical and the network slice service provider. Secondly,
the P&P framework realizes such fine-grained and technology-agnostic capability exposure and
control by utilizing micro-services. A P&P network slice instance comprises a group of self-
contained micro-services following a micro-service topology graph and each of the micro-
services can be activated or updated on demand at runtime individually without disrupting the
rest of the existing P&P instances, and thus the P&P framework is able to implement the
customizable control logic in relation to the concerned network slice for the vertical in a P&P
manner. The containerization and orchestration of the micro-services can employ Docker and
Kubernetes respectively, among other technologies [5-11].
This P&P framework was used to support the service customization of three typical use cases in
eHealth, smart grid and smart city lighting. For instance, in the eHealth use case, the P&P
framework allows the eHealth vertical to control and customize their network slice-based eHealth
service instance by deploying a specialized VNF (TeleStroke) to be deployed on demand to the
MEC platform at the edges of a 5G network. This way, the TeleStroke VNF is plugged to the
existing network slice service instance, activated and then started to function for the vertical, i.e.,
it intercepts imagery from an ambulance’s onboard video streaming to detect and diagnose stroke
of the patient in the ambulance, which is a time-critical mission. In terms of monitoring, the P&P
framework empowers and employs the One-Stop API’s graphical user interface (GUI) to show
the agreed topology view and components information of this network slice service instance to
the vertical, e.g., all the end-to-end network segments such as RAN, MEC and Core network and
their locations. Moreover, the P&P framework allows verticals to plug in machine learning
pipelines to a use case so that the use case can benefit from the added artificial intelligence to
improve the performance of the network slice-based service.
North Bound Interface (NBI) of the service management platform, namely on top of the Vertical
Slicer, which is the common entry point for all verticals into the 5G system. The Vertical Slicer
includes a set of mapping functions to translate vertical related business requirements to network
slice requirements and to map them to new or reusing existing network slices.
The 5G Vertical Slicer (5G-VS) [5-14] allows defining vertical services from a set of offered
Vertical Service Blueprints (VSB), which, along with instantiation parameters, will result in
Vertical Service Descriptors (VSD). The VSBs/VSDs are used for the verticals to describe their
vertical services including their SLA requirements. The SLA requirements can be of different
kinds presenting specific business and service requirements, for example: (i) end-to-end latency
and bandwidth requirements, necessary for the service to function correctly, (ii) number of
supported users, coverage area, etc., related to the dimensioning of the service, (iii) availability
and reliability, (iv) deployment time, energy efficiency, i.e., optimization targets for the
deployment of the service.
Then, the 5G-VS maps the vertical service descriptions and requirements defined in the VSD onto
a network slice, which is described with extended ETSI NFV Network Service Descriptors
(NSD). More specifically, the VSDs including such SLA requirements will be translated to an
NSD with appropriate selection of deployment flavours and instantiation level. To that end, the
NSD is determined from the VSD. Using a rule-based approach, specific values of the SLA
requirements are then translated into the selection of deployment flavour and instantiation level.
Some of the SLA requirements can be encoded in the NSD itself. For example, bandwidth
requirements can be expressed in the NSD as bandwidth requirements on virtual links, the number
of supported users can be mapped to a corresponding instantiation level with sufficient VNF
instances handling the expected number of user and reliability could be mapped to a deployment
flavour with or without redundant components.
In addition, the 5G-VS provides arbitration among several vertical service instances in case of a
vertical or other customer may request instantiation of several services and they may have agreed
on an overall resource budget regarding compute, storage, transport, and radio capacity, as defined
in the SLAs between the verticals and the service provider. The arbitration function in the 5G-VS
maps priorities of vertical services and SLA requirements to ranges of cardinalities of resources.
These cardinalities are used while deploying the NFV-NS and, in case of actual resource shortage,
to assign resources to the most important vertical service instances.
Another main role of the arbitration function is to map the vertical services to network slices,
while allowing multiple vertical services to share one or more network slices or network slice
subnets. Following the network slice model defined by 3GPP, a network slice can include multiple
slice subnets, where each slice subnet can be shared among multiple end-to-end network slices,
thus improving the infrastructure utilization efficiency. A typical example could be the sharing of
the same vEPC among different vertical service instances with similar requirements in terms of
mobile access, or the sharing of a service component for the collection of vehicle messages among
multiple automotive services that make use of the same messages. The logic behind network slice
sharing is service- and customer-driven. In other terms, any decision about re-using a slice subnet
instance should comply with the requirements of the services using it, for what concerns the
isolation among services. Essentially, for a new vertical service request, the arbitration function
will decide if a new network slice needs to be instantiated and any existing slice subnet that can
be re-used to build the new slice; and for each slice subnet to be re-used, if and how it needs to
be scaled to meet the requirements of the additional vertical service.
In summary, this automatic process of building and ordering vertical service and mapping them
to network slices significantly reduces the time needed for current manual translation and
configuration of the network slices.
A set of VSBs and VSDs has been created for the demonstration of different vertical use cases
including automotive, entertainment and eHealth, and smart factory verticals in the project. They
are provided to the service platform through the vertical-oriented API to define and customize
individual vertical services, and with the developed translation and arbitration functions provided
by the 5G-VS, the vertical services are automatically mapped to network slices including their
SLA requirements. The benefit has been shown in all vertical PoCs [5-15] for instance
entertainment and eHealth use cases, demonstrating that the service provisioning time, enabled
by the proposed solution, has been reduced from hours to a few minutes, meeting the 5G
requirements for vertical service provisioning.
5.11 References
[5-1] Nawar Jawad, Mukhald Salih, Kareem Ali, Benjamin Meunier, Yue Zhang, Xun Zhang,
Rudolf Zetik, Charilaos Zarakovitis, Harilaos Koumaras, Michail-Alexandros Kourtis,
Lina Shi, Wojciech Mazurczyk and John Cosmas “Smart Television Services using
NFV/SDN Network Management” IEEE Transactions on Broadcasting ( Volume: 65 ,
Issue: 2 , June 2019 ) Page(s): 404 – 413, ISSN Information:DOI:
10.1109/TBC.2019.2898159
[5-2] Nawar Jawad, Mukhald Salih, Kareem Ali, Benjamin Meunier and John Cosmas
“Indoor Unicasting/Multicasting service based on 5G Internet of Radio Light network
paradigm” BMSB2019 Jiju Island Korea June 2019
[5-3] Ryu – A component-based software defined networking framework, Online:
https://github.com/faucetsdn/ryu
[5-4] S. F. Chien, C. C. Zarakovitis, Q. Ni and P. Xiao, "Stochastic Asymmetric Blotto Game
Approach for Wireless Resource Allocation Strategies," in IEEE Transactions on
Wireless Communications, vol. 18, no. 12, pp. 5511-5528, Dec. 2019
[5-5] K. Cabaj, M. Gregorczyk, W. Mazurczyk, P. Nowakowski, P. Zorawski - SDN-based
Mitigation of Scanning Attacks for the 5G Internet of Radio Light System - In Proc. of
5G Network Security (5G-NS 2018) workshop, ARES 2018 Proceedings of the 13th
International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security Article No. 65,
August 2018
[5-6] K. Cabaj, M. Gregorczyk, W. Mazurczyk, P. Nowakowski, P. Żórawski - Network
threats mitigation using Software-Defined Networking for the 5G Internet of Radio
Light system, Security and Communication Networks, John Wiley & Sons, 2019, Vol.
2019, Article ID 4930908, 22 pages, DOI: 10.1155/2019/4930908
[5-7] K. Cabaj, M. Gregorczyk, W. Mazurczyk, P. Nowakowski, P. Żórawski - Sniffing
Detection within the Network: Revisiting Existing and Proposing Novel Approaches, -
In Proc. of 5G Network Security (5G-NS 2019) workshop, ARES 2019 Proceedings of
the 14th International Conference on Availability, Reliability and Security, August 2019
[5-8] J. Cosmas, B. Meunier, K. Ali, N. Jawad, M. Salih, H. Meng, M. Ganley, J. Gbadamosi,
A. Savov, Z. Hadad, B. Globen, H. Gokmen, S. Malkos, M. E. Cakan, H. Koumaras, M.
Kourtis, C. Sakkas, E. Salomon, Y. Avinoam, D. Negru, M. Lacaud, Y. Zhang, L-K.
Huang, R. Zetik, K. Cabaj, W. Mazurczyk, A. Kapovits “A Scalable and License Free
5G Internet of Radio Light Architecture for Services in Homes and Businesses” IEEE
International Symposium on Broadband Multimedia Systems and Broadcasting, June
5th – 8th 2018, Valencia, Spain DOI: 978-1-5386-4729-5/18/$31.00 ©2018 IEEE
[5-9] Lina Shi, Benjamin Meunier, Hequn Zhang, Xun Zhang, Andrei Vladimirescu, Wei Li,
Yue Zhang, John Cosmas, Kareem Ali, Nawar Jawad, Rudolf Zetik, Eric Legale,
Matteo Satta, Jintao Wang, Jian Song « Indoor 5G Location-based geographic data
6.1 References
[6-1] Sat5G project, Online: https://www.sat5g-project.eu/
[6-2] 5G-VINNI project, https://www.5g-vinni.eu/
[6-3] Sat5G project, project presentation, Online:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4y6uSrW4E0
[6-4] ESA ARTES, SATis5 project, Online: https://artes.esa.int/projects/satis5-0
[6-5] 5G VINNI, Moving experimentation facility site (Satellite connected vehicles), Online:
https://www.5g-vinni.eu/moving-experimentation-facility-site/
[6-6] Record funding for ARTES 4.0 at Space 19+, Online: https://artes.esa.int/news/record-
funding-artes-40-space-19
[6-7] ESA Completed and Running Activities for 5G SatCom, Online:
https://artes.esa.int/satellite-5g
[6-8] SATis5 Demonstrator for Satellite-Terrestrial Integration in the 5G Context, Online:
https://artes.esa.int/projects/satis5-0 and https://satis5.eurescom.eu/
[6-9] SATIS5 Demonstrate at the 10th Anniversary FUSECO Forum of Fraunhofer FOKUS
in Berlin, Online: https://satis5.eurescom.eu/2019/11/13/satis5-demonstrates-at-the-
10th-anniversary-fuseco-forum-of-fraunhofer-fokus-in-berlin/
coordinated by a small task force led by 5G IA, 5GAA, 5G-ACIA and PSCE, flanked by high-
level 3GPP Technical Specification Group Chairs and ETSI leadership.
The online Standards Tracker developed within 5G PPP serves as a collaboration tool between
standards specialists in the telecommunications industry and sector specialists across industry
verticals [7-5]. The tracker is the direct outcome of two 5G Vertical User Workshops that took
place in February 2019 [7-7] and July 2019 [7-8], which explored delegate journeys and reviewed
3GPP processes with verticals firmly in mind. Impacts from the workshops include dedicated
3GPP support services, such as a practical guide for verticals, newcomer sessions at plenaries, a
mentoring process between well-established and new delegates who can learn from each other,
liaisons for participation in vertical forums and MRPs to help create a stronger bond. The
abovementioned tool captures these common requirements with a view to setting the right mind-
set for verticals venturing into the 5G space, helping them find peers with similar functional
requirements, harmonising them, attending 3GPP meetings and amplifying each other as a key
step towards achieving scales of economies [7-6].
In the context of the 5G PPP Initiative, the workshops are now being replaced by webinars. The
first such webinar took place in May 2020 and attracted 308 participants from 27 countries (13
European, 11 in Asia, the South Pacific and North America). It explained how sector specialists
can contribute to upcoming technical specification work in Release 18 by showing the enablers
and functionalities already available in Releases 16 (June 2020) and 17 (December 2021). These
two releases bring the cornerstones for 5G standards with a set of technologies that will be re-
usable across verticals to enable them run new services. Work spans new functionalities, features
and enhancements for industry sectors, such as eMBB, mMTC, URLLC, including satellite
integration, 5G proximity services (side-link in the RAN area), a light version of multicast
solution for verticals like public safety, as well as enhancements for IIoT in the manufacturing
sector, etc.
7.1 References
[7-1] 5G Alliance for Connected Industries & Automation, available at: https://www-5g-
acia.org
[7-2] 3GPP Workplan, Online: https://www.3gpp.org/specifications/work-plan.
[7-3] 5G PPP, Progress Monitoring Report, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/annual-progress-
monitoring-reports/
[7-4] 5G PPP Architecture WG, View on 5G Architecture, February 2020, DOI
10.5281/zenodo.3265031, Online: URL http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3265031
[7-5] Global5G project, Standards Tracker Online Tool, Online: https://global5g.org/online-
tool-standards-tracker.
[7-6] Global5G project, Non public networks, Online: https://global5g.org/online-tool-
standards-tracker/non-public-networks.
[7-7] 5G Vertical User Workshop, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/5g-vertical-user-workshop/
[7-8] 2nd 5G Vertical User Workshop, Online: https://global5g.org/2nd-5g-vertical-user-
workshop-agenda
8.1 References
[8-1] EUBusinnes, Annual Report on European SMEs 2016/2017, Online:
https://www.eubusiness.com/topics/sme/sme-report-16-17.
[8-2] Find the SME you need, Online: https://www.networld2020.eu/find-the-sme-you-need-
new-page/
[8-3] European SME Expertise in 5G and Beyond, Online: https://www.networld2020.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2020/02/01-2020-sme-brochure-web.pdf
[8-4] Fortune Business Insights, “5G Infrastructure Market Size, Share and Analysis”,
Fortune Business Insights, July 2019, Online:
https://www.fortunebusinessinsights.com/industry-reports/5g-infrastructure-market-
100869.
[8-5] H2020, 5G PPP – 5G innovations for verticals with third party services, Online:
https://ec.europa.eu/info/funding-
tenders/opportunities/portal/screen/opportunities/topic-details/ict-41-2020
and requirements and on the other side the MNO actor engages itself in providing the required
services including possible specific dedicated SLAs including spectrum leasing. Cooperation
between MNOs and vertical industries in fact relies on the recognised 5G capability to provide
new levels of performance which opens the way for innovative uses in a number of vertical
industries which expect customised networks and products that meet their specific needs.
Furthermore, cooperative commercial negotiations would provide the suitable flexibility to adapt
to the dynamics of the business models of vertical sectors largely still in development.
Possibly, commercial negotiations could be supported by light-touch regulatory provisions, e.g.
mechanisms to have operators granting reasonable requests from vertical industries by providing
them with customised solutions in terms of coverage and performance. Also, MNOs’ wholesale
reference offers could be a suitable mechanism for cooperation, although not as flexible to fulfil
diverse vertical industries’ scenarios as a purely commercial negotiation.
Where vertical industries may have specific technical needs and require access to spectrum, an
effective option consists in implementing spectrum leasing agreements between MNOs as
primary spectrum licensee, holding the spectrum usage rights, and the vertical industries.
Examples of voluntary commercial based agreements have been already implemented, where
nation-wide MNOs lease part of their frequency holdings to “micro-network” operators to build
private networks for industrial customers [9-4]. There could also be cases where national
spectrum regulation requires MNOs to allow spectrum access to implement local networks.
For example, in Italy [9-5] the MNO licensees in the 26 GHz frequency band are required to allow
access to third parties, who are not operators of public telecommunications services, in the form
of wholesale supply of capacity, according to agreed technical modalities depending on the
characteristics of the networks (e.g., in slicing mode), and which may also include the use of
frequencies by the accessing party. The applicant needs to be previously authorized for the
management of the network and the use of frequencies and cannot resell pure electronic
communications services to the public. In Italy the 26 GHz band was licensed for 5G use in 2019
however no access request has been addressed to MNOs so far.
In the UK, the regulator has recently made spectrum available for coordinated localised access on
a shared basis [9-6] by means of two new licence products: the Local Access licence (launched at
the end of July 2019) and the Shared Access licence (launched in December 2019). In particular,
the Local Access licence provides a way for other users to access spectrum in the frequency bands
that are already licensed to mobile operators, but which is not being used or planned for use in a
particular area within the next three years, in locations where this would not adversely impact the
incumbent licensee’s planned use of the spectrum, in terms of both interferences and operation
constraints. Licences are for a defined period (the default licence period is three years), with no
guarantee of access after the licence period has ended. The Shared Access licence gives access to
spectrum bands which support mobile technology and is currently available in four different bands
(2 x 3.3 MHz shared spectrum at 1800 MHz; 10 MHz shared spectrum at 2300 MHz; 390 MHz
at 3.8-4.2 GHz; and 2.25 GHz in the lower 26 GHz band) with two kinds of licence: low power
and medium power, limited to indoor low power licences in some cases (e.g., the lower 26 GHz
band and the 2300 MHz shared spectrum at least initially). Licences are for an indefinite period
but can be revoked including for non-use or for spectrum management reasons. As of the end of
February 2020, there has been one Local Access licence granted for a broadband wireless service
at a rural location (out of nine applications, of which four unsuccessful and four still under
consideration) and nine Shared Access new licences [9-7].
Other regulation arrangements could provide mechanisms to require operators leasing agreements
between operator to access spectrum to implement local networks. This is for example the
mechanism applied in Finland to the 3.5 GHz band, where licence conditions require “the licensee
to lease on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms the right to use the frequency to another
operator to provide a network service in a geographical area for which the licensee does not offer
a tailored network service despite a request to do so. This will allow sufficient spectrum
availability for the construction of national commercial networks, but at the same time promote
the implementation of tailored and local solutions” [9-7].
In Italy, operators with 80 MHz assignments in the 3600-3800 MHz band are required by
regulation to provide lease on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms an access service to any
operator for the development of 5G services in a specified area, up to the minimum of the area
covered by a single plant [9-5].
The cooperation models mentioned above are based on the common approach that spectrum usage
rights are fully awarded to mobile network operators, who maintain the spectrum usage rights
also in case of leasing agreements and no spectrum is reserved to vertical industries.
An alternative approach could be implemented where, in addition to substantial nationwide
spectrum usage rights awarded to MNOs, dedicated spectrum could be made available to verticals
to e.g., take account of the request by the vertical sectors that some specific services require
frequencies for their own telecommunications networks. When considering how to define and
achieve the best means to ensure availability of advanced services for local or industrial users, the
issue of possibly reserving spectrum to vertical industries has been lengthily debated, following
the vertical industries’ requests to be assigned dedicated spectrum. An example of this model has
been implemented in Germany, where local licenses for 5G are released in the 3700-3800 MHz
frequency range. Frequencies are allocated according to demand, with preference given to
Industry 4.0 or agricultural and forestry applications for an initial period of ten years [9-9].
Services are limited to company internal communications in e.g., company premises, industrial
parks, exhibitions, any sort of telecommunication services for the public is not allowed;
furthermore, in order to ensure efficient and interference-free use of spectrum, collaboration with
MNOs and possible operators of geographically adjacent radio networks is required [9-10].
Similarly, 80 MHz is to be assigned for local licences in Sweden in the 3720-3800 MHz band,
while 320 MHz (3400-3720 MHz) will be for national licenses [9-11], [9-12]. Also concerning
the 26 GHz band, there are examples of spectrum reserved for local licences. For example, in
Finland 850 MHz (24.25–25.1 GHz) in the lower part of the band will be excluded from the
auction for national use and reserved for the construction of local networks e.g., in ports and
industrial facilities, while three 800 MHz frequency blocks (25.1–27.5 GHz ) will be auctioned
for national use [9-13].
However, spectrum set-asides do not prevent MNOs from making agreements to manage private
networks for enterprises either in their nationwide spectrum assignments or in privately-owned
spectrum, which is not licensed directly by the operator itself. An example is Deutsche Telekom
in Germany which is reported to expect to manage most private 5G networks at 3.7-3.8 GHz [9-
14].
In general, deploying a large number of small specialized verticals-oriented networks can prove
to be less efficient than providing different services by a smaller number of large networks,
leveraging on 5G flexibility and slicing features. In particular, possible drawbacks of the spectrum
set-aside approach are:
• the development of possible “non-standard” solutions for niche markets, which could not
interoperate with the 5G environment and could become outdated in very short time,
• the risk of spectrum rights fragmentation, which could seriously undermine the possibility
to assign the sufficiently large contiguous blocks, especially in the low and mid frequency
bands, required to deliver most 5G services,
• supplemental coexistence issues between networks,
• the risk of spectrum waste as spectral resources assigned outside a conventional market-
based national award procedure and dedicated to restricted use cases could remain
underused.
In general, the deployment of options and business models should ensure that 5G flexible
solutions assist in the full digitization of verticals following standardized solutions and avoiding
potential issues e.g., spectrum fragmentation to the detriment of sufficiently large contiguous
blocks availability especially in the low and mid frequency bands, increased coexistence issues
between networks and the risk of underusing spectrum. Finally, competition issues should be
carefully addressed and solved in a fair way if spectral resources are assigned outside the
mainstream of conventional market-based national award procedures.
9.1 References
[9-1] 5G for Europe: An Action Plan, COM(2016)588 and Staff Working Document
SWD(2016)306, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the
Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the
Regions, 14 September 2016
[9-2] CEPT roadmap for 5G, November 2015 reviewed at each ECC Plenary meeting (last
revision Version 10, Revised 6 March 2020)
[9-3] 5G Observatory Quarterly Report 7 Up to March 2020, European 5G Observatory, April
2020
[9-4] Three Sweden leases public spectrum for private usage to stop spectrum carve-up,
Enterprise IoT insights, 28 May 2019
[9-5] Resolution no. 231/18/CONS Assignment procedures and rules for the use of the
frequencies available in the 694-790 MHz, 3600-3800 MHz AND 26.5-27.5 GHz bands
for terrestrial systems of electronic communications in order to favor the transition to 5G
technology under the Law 27 December 2017, n. 205, Autorità per le Garanzie nelle
Comunicazioni, 8 May 2018
[9-6] Enabling wireless innovation through local licensing, Ofcom, 25 July 2019
[9-7] https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0028/192790/5g-mobile-spectrum-
licences.pdf, Ofcom, 4 March 2020
[9-8] Turning Finland into the world leader in communications networks - Digital
Infrastructure Strategy 2025, Ministry of Transport and Communications, Helsinki 2019
[9-9] Bosch applies for local 5G licenses, Presse release, 21 November.2019
[9-10] Local licenses for 5G in 3700-3800 MHz in Germany, Josch Luxa, FUSECO Forum
Berlin, Berlin, 07 November 2019
[9-11] Samråd av regler och villkor inför auktion av 3,5 GHz- och 2,3 GHz-banden, The
Swedish Post and Telecom Authority (PTS) Press release, 3 June 2019
[9-12] Public invitation to auction in the 3.5 GHz and 2.3 GHz bands, The Swedish Post and
Telecom Authority (PTS) Press release, 17 April 2020
[9-13] More frequencies for 5G – consultation round on the terms of the spectrum auction
launched, The Ministry of Transport and Communications of Finland, Press release, 7
February 2020
[9-14] Deutsche Telekom expects to manage most private 5G networks at 3.7-3.8 GHz, too,
Enterprise IoT Insights, 12 March 2020
10.1 References
[10-1] 5G Infrastructure Association: 5G PPP Progress Monitoring Report -2018, November
2019, Online:https://5g-ppp.eu/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/5G-PPP_PMR2018-
Sept2019_Final.pdf.
[10-2] 5G PPP: Phase 1 project achievements, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/phase-1-key-
achievements/#1507204993929-bc016a9a-7b69.
[10-3] 5G PPP, Phase 2 project achievements, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/phase-2-key-
achievements/.
[10-4] 5G PPP, White Papers, Online: https://5g-ppp.eu/white-papers/.
[10-5] 5G PPP, 5G Pan-European Trials Roadmap – Version 4.0, Online: https://5g-
ppp.eu/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/5GInfraPPP_TrialsWG_Roadmap_Version4.0.pdf.
[10-6] 5G PPP, White paper 5G Infrastructure PPP Trials and pilots, Online:https://5g-
ppp.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2019/09/5GInfraPPP_10TPs_Brochure_FINAL_low_singlepages.pdf.
[10-7] 5G PPP, White paper 5G network support of vertical industries in the 5G PPP
ecosystem. February 2020, Online:https://5g-ppp.eu/wp-
content/uploads/2020/03/5PPP_VTF_brochure_v2.1.pdf.
[10-8] 5G PPP, Vertical sectors cartography, Online: https://global5g.org/cartography
[10-9] Smart Networks and Services Partnership Proposal, Online:
https://ec.europa.eu/info/files/european-partnership-smart-networks-and-services_en
PoC Proof-of-Concept
PoP Point of Presence
PPDR Public Protection and Disaster Relief
PSCE Public Safety Communication Europe
QoE Quality of Experience
QoS Quality of Service
QUIC Quick UDP Internet Connection
RAN Radio Access Network
RAT Radio Access Technology
RRLH Remote Radio Light Head
RSS Received Signal Strength
RRV Rapid Response Vehicle
RSU Roadside Unit
RTT Round Trip Time
SA Stand Alone
SA Service and System Aspects (ETSI)
SAE Society of Automotive Engineers
SatCom Satellite Communications
SBA Service Based Architecture
SCADA Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition
SDA Strategic Deployment Agenda
SDK Software Development Kit
SDN Software Defined Networks
SDO Standards Developing Organisation
SGW Signalling Gateway
SLA Service Level Agreement
SME Small and Medium-sized Enterprises
SNS Smart Networks and Services
SWD Staff Working Document (EC)
TB Transport Block
TBD To Be Defined
TC Technical Committee (ETSI)
TCP Transport Control Protocol
TDoA Time Difference of Arrival
Phase 2 Projects
List of Contributors
Editorial Team
Overall Editors
Alexandros Kaloxylos The 5G Infrastructure Association Belgium
Raffaele De Peppe Telecom Italia Italy
Anastasius Gavras Eurescom GmbH Germany
Section 2 Editors
Raffaele De Peppe Telecom Italia Italy
Section 3 Editors
Simone Redana NOKIA Germany
Ömer Bulakci NOKIA Germany
Alexandros Kaloxylos The 5G IA Greece
Section 4 Editors
Alexandros Kaloxylos The 5G IA Belgium
Anastasius Gavras Eurescom GmbH Germany
Section 6 Editor
Christine Leurquin SES Belgium
Section 7 Editors
Section 8 Editors
Section 9 Editors
Section 10 Editors
Contributors
Alexandros Kaloxylos The 5G Infrastructure Association Belgium
Almudenia Diaz University of Malaga Spain
Amelie Werbrouck SES Belgium
Anastasius Gavras Eurescom GmbH Germany
Andrea Conti University of Ferrara, CNIT Italy
Anna Tzanakaki University of Bristol UK
Antonio Matencio- University of the West of Scotland UK
Escolar
Apostolos Kousaridas Huawei Germany
Belkachem Mouhouche Samsung UK
Ben Meunier Brunel University UK
Carlos J. Bernardos Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Spain
Charilaos Zarakovitis National Centre for Scientific Research Greece
DEMOKRITOS
Cristian Patachia Orange Romania
Christoph Schmelz Nokia Bell Labs Germany