Home >

Domestic Enterprises Frequently Banned Overseas Bidding, And India Ocean Blocked.

2010/5/28 13:29:00 28

In recent years, China Telecom equipment vendors, who are booming in overseas markets, have been encountering frequent cold cuts in the India market. After the India government issued a "ban" on the grounds of "fear of security" and stopped the related equipment of China's imports, the latest news yesterday was that BSNL, a state-owned telecom operator in India, also banned HUAWEI and ZTE from participating in the bidding of its GSM project.


Chinese equipment dealers repeatedly hit nails in India


Reporters yesterday learned that BSNL, a state-owned telecom operator in India, has explicitly issued a ban to halt the bidding of China Telecom equipment manufacturers HUAWEI and ZTE in its GSM north and east area projects.


"It is an indisputable fact that the equipment of Western European manufacturers is really expensive compared with the equipment of Chinese manufacturers," said KURDI Pu al al al al BSNL, chairman of the company. However, the government instructed us not to order the equipment of Chinese manufacturers, especially those in key areas. " After the two Chinese companies were forced to go out, only three Western European firms were competing in bidding, Ericsson, NOKIA SIEMENS and Al Carter lucent.


In fact, this is far from the first time China's equipment makers have encountered policy sticks in India. As early as last August 28th, the Ministry of telecommunications of India suddenly convened a meeting of major mobile operators, asking not to use Chinese made telecommunications equipment in 20 relatively sensitive States, on the ground that it might endanger national security. One operator pointed out that as early as the white hot bidding of 3G licences in India was hot, all communications equipment manufacturers were tested. HUAWEI and ZTE (000063, stock bar) have not yet passed the test, and Ericsson and nosie and other western manufacturers are also "conditionally passed" and are required to sign the guarantee.


It is understood that in the past five months, the application of India telecom operators for the purchase of China's communications equipment has not been approved, resulting in the sale of new contracts by HUAWEI, Tongyu and UT, which are almost zero in the first quarter of India.


The relevant departments have stepped up their efforts to mediate.


For India's equipment export industry, India is the largest overseas market, so domestic enterprises have been seeking to lift the ban. ZTE yesterday told reporters on the phone that the company has actively commissioned relevant departments to mediate, hoping to solve this problem as soon as possible; and in mid, HUAWEI said it was willing to provide the India government with the source code of its network system to dispel the security concerns of the government. None of the above results were significant.


Data show that since last December, HUAWEI's exports to the India market have begun to encounter obstacles. So far, by the first quarter of this year, the export of PBX and mobile communication base stations in the entire Chinese telecommunications market has fallen by nearly half.


Compared with the rapid growth in India market before, such a huge gap is clearly regrettable. Cy berMedia data show that in the year ended March 2009, India's market revenue doubled, to $1 billion 357 million, while ZTE gained $1 billion 60 million in revenue during the same period. The products and services provided by the two companies were nearly 1/3 less than that of their competitors. This is also considered by the industry as a fundamental reason for the India government's ban.


Chen Jian, Vice Minister of Commerce of China, responded that the Chinese government was highly concerned about the unfair treatment of Chinese companies in a series of telecommunications censorship in India recently, and has already made representations, hoping and believing the relevant departments of India to cancel unfair obstacles.


Trade barriers are hard to break in the short term


"I think trade barriers between China and India are hard to break in the short term. The telecommunications industry is just the tip of the iceberg, and many other industries are facing the same problem." Kan Kaili, a professor and communication expert of Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, told reporters that the situation of China's over reliance on exports is not cold for a day. The fundamental solution is to expand domestic demand. Kan Kai Li said that Premier Wen Jiabao once pointed out during the 2007 "two sessions" that "a country depends too much on foreign trade exports, which will inevitably increase the risk of economic instability."

  • Related reading

Can The Headquarters Economy Open Up A New Era Of Warp Knitting?

Latest topics
|
2010/5/28 12:59:00
28

The National Talent Work Conference Was Held, And Hu Jintao And Wen Jiabao Delivered Speeches.

Latest topics
|
2010/5/27 14:09:00
91

Shandong Peninsula Blue Economic Zone Pilot Has Been Approved

Latest topics
|
2010/5/25 10:21:00
70

The State Council Approved The Implementation Of The Yangtze River Delta Regional Planning

Latest topics
|
2010/5/24 17:54:00
26

Regional Planning Of Beijing Tianjin Hebei Metropolitan Area

Latest topics
|
2010/5/20 14:41:00
102
Read the next article

世博会服装系列独特的创意

上海大学巴黎国际时装艺术学院近日举行“迎世博”2010年世博会服装系列设计学生作品展,该学院受邀参与2010年上海世博会服装产品的设计项目,包括为世博会志愿者设计完整配套的服装系列,为中小学生设计世博校服系列,为“迎世博”街道知识竞赛活动设计观众服系列,以及饶有时尚趣味的亲子装和情侣装的设计系列..