Key Points

India's 6G rollout will only make sense after 5G use cases are fully saturated and monetised according to the DG of Digital Networks. The country already boasts over 65 million 5G users, showing strong adoption but underutilised potential. Infrastructure faces challenges with consumption outpacing deployment speed despite world-class scaling. Right of Way permissions and public acceptance remain key hurdles that require treating digital infrastructure as essential lifelines rather than revenue sources.

Key Points: India 6G Rollout Depends on Full 5G Use Case Monetisation Says DG

  • India has over 65 million 5G users showing strong technology adoption base
  • The real gap lies in understanding 5G capabilities rather than network availability
  • Digital infrastructure faces saturation due to faster consumption than deployment speed
  • Right of Way permissions remain the main challenge for deeper infrastructure penetration
3 min read

6G rollout will depend on complete utilisation of 5G use cases: Manoj Kumar Singh, DG Digital Networks

DG Digital Networks Manoj Kumar Singh states 6G deployment requires complete saturation of 5G use cases first, highlighting India's 65 million 5G users and infrastructure challenges.

"6G scope will come when we have a completely saturated use cases of 5G - Manoj Kumar Singh"

New Delhi, October 10

While India has made significant progress in rolling out 5G services, the next generation technology 6G, will only make sense when 5G use cases are fully saturated and monetised, said Manoj Kumar Singh, Director General, Digital Networks.

Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of India Mobile Congress (IMC) 2025 on the future of 6G rollout, Singh said that the country already has a strong base of users for 5G services.

"As the data speak that we have more than 65 million users for 5G. So it is not a question of 5G availability, but the question is the utilisation of 5G which we normally say the use cases," he said.

He noted that the real gap lies not in the availability of the technology, but in understanding and leveraging its full potential.

"Where there is a gap, understanding the capability of the 5G is a gap. The gap is not the availability of the 5G. So that's the way the whole focus has to be towards the monetisation and modernisation which will happen when there are multiple use cases," Singh explained.

He further added that once 5G use cases are completely developed and monetised, they will pave the way for 6G.

"It will help operators also to encourage further deployment of 6G. But if I speak today, 6G definitely has a scope. But 6G scope will come when we have a completely saturated use cases of 5G. Then only the 6G use cases will make much more monetisation sense," he said.

Talking about India's digital infrastructure, Singh said, "So when you say we have a very robust infrastructure, I would say that yes, we are robust, but the uptake is faster than we can scale the infrastructure. So our consumption is rising more than the speed which we are deploying. So always there is a saturation. Definitely our scale of deployment is best in the world. But definitely considering the uptake in our country, it is to scale further."

To counter this saturation, he suggested a cross-industry approach to infrastructure utilisation.

"One infrastructure cannot be dedicated to one sector. So we have to say it is a multi-utility infrastructure. We cannot have a standalone infrastructure for one sector. So the only way forward to meet this saturation is cross-industry utilisation," he said.

Highlighting the challenges faced by the sector, Singh pointed out that the main hurdle is Right of Way (ROW) permissions.

"Even today the acceptability of putting the infrastructure deeper into the society is a challenge. We are still being treated like a revenue-generating organisation which is not the case. We are infrastructure," he said, adding that awareness is needed to treat digital infrastructure as a lifeline and not just a revenue source.

He also appreciated the government's role in supporting the telecom sector. "Without government support this infrastructure piece cannot work, and the government is very very active in getting support to us. So support is excellent," Singh said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
As someone working in tech, I completely agree. 5G has so much potential beyond just faster downloads - IoT, smart cities, telemedicine. But we need better infrastructure and awareness. The Right of Way issue is a real bottleneck that needs urgent attention.
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Sarah B
Living in Delhi, I've experienced 5G but honestly can't tell much difference from 4G most times. Maybe we need more practical applications that actually benefit common people rather than just technical upgrades. 🤔
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Arjun K
Good to see government officials being realistic about technology adoption. In India, we often rush to implement new tech without fully utilizing existing infrastructure. The cross-industry approach makes perfect sense for our diverse economy.
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Kavya N
While I appreciate the practical approach, I'm concerned this might slow down our global competitiveness. Other countries are already working on 6G research. We should balance current optimization with future planning. Can't afford to fall behind in the tech race! 💻
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Michael C
The infrastructure saturation point is real. In Bangalore, network congestion during peak hours is noticeable even with 5G. The multi-utility infrastructure concept could be a game-changer if implemented properly across sectors.
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Divya L

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