5G solutions for energy-efficient buildings are the key to green buildings

2022.11.26

5G solutions for energy-efficient buildings are the key to green buildings


According to the report, key measures include energy-efficient intelligent functions, solutions supporting multi-band multi-operators, software reuse of existing architectures, new materials that are more energy-efficient, intelligent perception and macro-micro coordination. All of these have proven to be very effective, enabling suppliers to offer more green systems.

Building equipment suppliers are prioritizing green and sustainability aspects of their development plans and investing in various technologies to improve product efficiency.

According to the report, key measures include energy-efficient smart functions, solutions that support multi-band multi-operators, software that reuses existing architectures, new materials that are more energy-efficient, intelligent perception and macro-micro coordination. All of these have proven to be very effective, enabling suppliers to offer more green systems.

The efficiency of in-building wireless has become a key concern for the wireless communications and architectural design industries. For maximum energy efficiency, building structures need to be as wireless-friendly as possible.

Today, most network operators still focus on macro network deployment, but enterprises have already deployed 5G indoor solutions on their private networks. 5G enables enterprises to accelerate smart development, such as smart manufacturing, smart warehouses, smart transportation, smart hospitals, etc., and promote digital transformation, which is a key step towards a comprehensive green journey.

Greening building systems helps businesses stay green during the design and deployment phases. To ensure that buildings are greener, they need to ensure that the operational phase is green by having a generation plan that uses 100% renewable energy, or a power purchase agreement.

Enterprises should adopt the latest technologies to reduce power consumption per bit, and next-generation in-building networks should also include building information management systems and energy management systems.

These findings come from ABI Research's Sustainable Built-in Cellular Applications Analysis report. The report is part of the company's 5G and Mobile Network Infrastructure research service and includes research, data, and analyst insights. Based on extensive preliminary interviews, the application analysis report provides an in-depth analysis of key market trends and factors for a specific technology.