Site icon Converge Digest

Airbus Expands Private 5G Rollout with Ericsson

Airbus is accelerating its digital transformation with the deployment of Ericsson’s Private 5G solution at its major manufacturing hubs, beginning with Hamburg and Toulouse. The initiative supports Airbus’ long-term goal of migrating all industrial operations to 5G-based connectivity, ensuring ultra-reliable, low-latency communications across its global production network. The collaboration extends beyond France and Germany, with new rollouts planned in Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

The Ericsson Private 5G network underpins Airbus’ next-generation factory automation and digitalization initiatives, enabling use cases such as 3D simulation, augmented reality for assembly and inspection, real-time part traceability, and predictive maintenance. Leveraging Ericsson’s modular architecture and API-driven integration, the system aligns with Airbus’ stringent cybersecurity and IT compliance standards while providing rapid deployment through built-in infrastructure automation. The result is a standardized, scalable model that Airbus can replicate across multiple international sites.

Ericsson’s 5G Standalone technology gives Airbus’ production environment end-to-end mobility and site-wide wireless coverage—critical for IoT integration, collaborative robotics, and real-time quality assurance. The companies are also collaborating on research into connected aircraft cabins, 6G readiness, and non-terrestrial networks, extending their partnership beyond factory connectivity into the broader aerospace ecosystem.

• Airbus has deployed Ericsson Private 5G at its Hamburg factory, with Toulouse set for completion in 2026.

• Future deployments are planned across Airbus’ strategic European and U.S. sites.

• The network supports 3D simulation, augmented reality, traceability, and predictive maintenance.

• Ericsson Private 5G integrates seamlessly with Airbus’ IT and cybersecurity systems.

• Joint R&D explores 6G and satellite-5G convergence for aerospace applications.

“Our objective is to migrate all our industrial networks towards 5G to ensure unified, ultra-reliable connectivity from the operator’s workstation to the aircraft cabin,” said Hakim Achouri, 5G expert at Airbus. “This deployment accelerates projects involving 3D simulation, augmented reality, improved traceability for parts, and predictive maintenance for our assets.”

🌐 Analysis: Airbus’ decision to scale Ericsson Private 5G marks a pivotal step in industrial digitalization, positioning 5G as the backbone of future aerospace manufacturing. The rollout mirrors trends across the automotive and heavy engineering sectors, where private 5G is displacing Wi-Fi and wired systems for mission-critical automation. For Ericsson, the Airbus partnership reinforces its growing presence in enterprise 5G, alongside deployments in mining, utilities, and logistics — strengthening its lead in industrial wireless infrastructure.

Exit mobile version