Huawei
and ZTE Equipment Removed from Cellular Towers in US
As China
and the United States jockey for tech primacy, wireless carriers in dozens of
states are tearing out Chinese equipment. That has turned into a costly,
difficult process.
Deep in a pine forest in Wilcox
County, Ala., three workers dangled from the top of a 350-foot cellular tower. They
were there to rip out and replace Chinese equipment from the local wireless network.
Three hours into the job, the
team ran into a hitch. Replacement gear from a European company was obstructing
a safety beacon for airplanes. “We’ve got a problem,” a crew member on the ground
said. “They say it’s blocking the beacon.”
The project had already been
delayed for months because of storms, slow equipment shipments and labor shortages. The new snafu, discovered early this month,
would add at least two more days and blow the budget, said John Nettles, the president
of the family-owned Pine Belt Cellular, who was standing at the base of the tower.
“People in Washington think it’s
easy to just swap out the equipment, but there are always problems you didn’t expect,
always more expenses and always delays,” he said.
As the United States and China
battle for geopolitical and technological primacy, the fallout has reached rural
Alabama and small wireless carriers in dozens of states. They are on the receiving
end of the Biden administration’s sweeping policies to suppress China’s rise, which
include trade restrictions, a $52 billion package to bolster domestic semiconductor
manufacturing against China and the divestiture of the video app TikTok from its Chinese owner.
What the wireless carriers must
do, under a program known as “rip and replace,” has become the starkest physical
manifestation of the tech Cold War between the two superpowers. The program, which
took effect in 2020, mandates that American companies tear out telecom equipment
made by the Chinese companies Huawei and ZTE. U.S. officials have warned that gear
from those companies could be used by Beijing for espionage and to steal commercial
secrets.
Instead, U.S. carriers have to
use equipment from non-Chinese companies. The Federal
Communications Commission, which oversees the program, would then reimburse the
carriers from a pot of $1.9 billion intended to cover their costs.
Similar rip-and-replace efforts
are taking place elsewhere. In Europe, where Huawei products have been a key
part of telecom networks, carriers in Belgium, Britain, Denmark, the Netherlands
and Sweden have also been swapping out the Chinese equipment because of security
concerns, according to Strand Consult, a research firm that tracks the telecom industry.
“Rip-and-replace was the first
front in a bigger story about the U.S. and China’s decoupling, and that story will
continue into the next decade with a global race for A.I. and other technologies,”
said Blair Levin, a former F.C.C. chief of staff and a fellow at the Brookings Institution.
But cleansing U.S. networks of
Chinese tech has not been easy. The costs have already ballooned above $5 billion,
according to the F.C.C., more than double what Congress appropriated for reimbursements.
Many carriers also face long supply chain delays for new equipment.
The program’s burden has fallen
disproportionately on smaller carriers, which relied more on the cheaper gear from
the Chinese firms than large companies like AT&T and Verizon. Given rip-and-replace’s difficulties, some smaller wireless companies now
say they may not be able to upgrade their networks and continue serving their communities,
where they are often the only internet providers.
“For many rural communities,
they are faced with the disastrous choice of having to continue to use insecure
networks that are ripe for surveillance or having to cut off their services,” said
Geoffrey Starks, a Democratic commissioner at the F.C.C.
Last month, Senator Deb Fischer,
a Republican of Nebraska, introduced a bill to close the gap in rip-and-replace
funding for carriers. Passing it will be challenging, with similar legislation failing
twice over the past year and fierce debate in Washington over government spending
and the debt ceiling. But “we have to follow up,” Ms. Fischer said. “Some of these
carriers could go out of business.”
The scrutiny of Chinese telecom
companies goes back more than a decade. In 2012, a Congressional committee issued
a report on Huawei and ZTE warning of the companies’ ties to Beijing. In 2019, former
President Donald J. Trump restricted U.S. companies from selling goods to the Chinese
firms, while the F.C.C. banned companies that receive federal subsidies from buying
Huawei and ZTE equipment. The agency expanded those restrictions last year to limit
all imports from the Chinese companies.
Rip-and-replace rolled out after
Congress passed a law in January 2020 creating the reimbursement effort. But costs
from the program quickly soared.
In January, the F.C.C. said
it had received 126 applications seeking funding beyond what it could reimburse.
Lawmakers had underestimated the costs of shredding Huawei and ZTE equipment, and
new equipment and labor costs have risen. The F.C.C. said
it could cover only about 40 percent of the expenses.
Some wireless carriers immediately
paused their replacement efforts. “Until we have assurance of total project funding,
this project will continue to be delayed as we await the necessary funding required
to build and pay for the new network equipment,” United Wireless of Dodge City,
Kan., wrote in a regulatory filing to the F.C.C. in January.
Huawei declined to comment; ZTE
didn’t respond to a request for comment.
In southern Alabama’s Black Belt
region, known for its historical cotton plantations and paper mills, complying with
rip-and-replace has been a central initiative at Pine Belt Cellular, one of the
few wireless carriers for 2,000 homes and businesses in five counties.
The company was founded in 1958
by James Nettles, a country doctor in Arlington who installed phone lines into the
homes of patients so they could call him for home visits.
After James Nettles’s son, John Nettles, joined the phone business in 1988,
the family expanded into wireless service with federal grants. In 2011, John Nettles
took additional F.C.C. subsidies and upgraded Pine Belt’s network to include broadband
for fast internet service.
Six equipment manufacturers pitched
their gear to him, he said. Mr. Nettles chose ZTE because the company offered equipment
at less than half the cost of other bids. Pine Belt initially bought $5 million
in ZTE equipment, including hundreds of antennas, radios and other gear for its
67 cell towers.
The F.C.C. “told me to find the
cheapest equipment, and no one thought twice about ZTE being Chinese,” he said.
But since restrictions on ZTE
gear were introduced, Mr. Nettles has spent most of his time trying to replace it
with equipment from Western companies like Nokia and Microsoft.
At Pine Belt’s central networking
hub, a windowless cinder block building in downtown Selma, seven large metal bins
recently overflowed with ZTE servers, processors and switches, the gear that moves
internet traffic around and connects calls. There were also racks of new Nokia and
Microsoft equipment and Dell computers. The Chinese and Western-made technology
will operate simultaneously until Pine Belt can completely rid its cell towers of
ZTE equipment.
In 2021, Pine Belt applied for
$68 million in reimbursements from the F.C.C. for the replacement effort. But last
July, the agency said that it could only refund costs of up to $27 million. Pine
Belt is about 15 percent into its transition away from Chinese equipment and is
already $5 million over the F.C.C.’s budget, Mr. Nettles said.
Early this month, Mr. Nettles
drove 15 miles to a rusting 300-foot tower where two workers were preparing to tear
out Chinese gear. Rigged with ropes and pulleys, they planned to climb the tower
to assess if it could hold the weight of an additional three antennas and radio
equipment from Nokia.
The workers decided they had
to pour cement under the tower to create a stronger base for the additional load.
The tower will have to hold the old ZTE and new Nokia equipment during the rip-and-replace
work to prevent any service interruptions.
As Mr. Nettles parked near the
tower, a customer in Selma called to complain that his cell service was cutting
in and out. The customer was between one tower with ZTE equipment and another with
Nokia equipment.
“The ZTE and Nokia equipment
aren’t communicating well with each other,” Mr. Nettles tried to explain. “Sorry
about the inconvenience.”