Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
CommScope subsidiary, wireless communications company Andrew, has expanded its operations in China with the completion of a manufacturing plant and distribution centre in the province of Suzhou.
Ben Cardwell, vice president of sales and
marketing for Andrew in Asia Pacific, said today that, with China
investing billions of dollars in 3G networks, the company was
completing expansion of its Suzhou manufacturing and distribution
center to better support its local customers.
Cardwell said the Suzhou factory, in operation since August 1998,
Andrew’s Suzhou currently has more than 2,000 employees and a
production area of more than 20,000 square meters, and the expansion
will increase the workforce by approximately 400 and the production
space for base station antenna manufacturing by 50 percent.
“The highly skilled Suzhou workforce manufactures base station antennas
for deployment in Chinese networks and for export to the rest of Asia
and beyond, with all major frequency bands and technologies
represented. The facility also manufactures Heliax 2.0 coaxial RF
cable, Radiax radiating cable, and cable components and accessories in
its Suzhou facility.
“By making wireless products locally, Andrew can better support Chinese
clients with complete wireless communication solutions and promptly
respond to tight implementation and delivery requirements.
Cardwell said that despite the global economic crisis, Andrew continues
to see significant opportunity in the Chinese wireless marketplace,
with the issuance of China’s 3G licenses and the efforts of the Chinese
government to revitalise technology industries.
“With our vast experience in supporting 3G networks all over the world,
we can offer our China customers the broadest solution portfolio and
global experience at a lower total cost of ownership. As the wireless
market continues to evolve, Andrew is well-positioned to help its
customers succeed now and in the future.”
Cardwell also said that throughout the rapid development of China’s
telecommunication industry, demands for advanced technologies had
routinely increased, and to meet this demand, Andrew had continually
grown its high-volume manufacturing operations in Suzhou and Shenzhen,
and its research and product design activities in Shanghai, as well as
other locations in China, “to guarantee Chinese clients with
world-class products, high quality and timely delivery.”
According to Cardwell, Andrew was the only non-indigenous cable and
antenna supplier approved by China Telecom for the first phase of its
3G CDMA wireless network and one of the few non-indigenous vendors
approved for the new China Unicom’s 3G WCDMA network.
David Bass
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