-

Hewlett Packard Enterprise Powering TELUS to Deliver Canada’s First 5G Open RAN Network

HPE Infrastructure provides efficient, open and flexible connectivity across 3,000 sites throughout urban and rural communities

BARCELONA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NYSE: HPE) announced it is working with TELUS, which is building Canada’s first 5G open radio access network (Open RAN), by providing infrastructure across 3,000 sites. Once completed, the new TELUS Open RAN 5G network will provide instantaneously-responsive connectivity enhancing the customer experience with faster connectivity and mobile access.

Designed specifically to support high-performance telecommunications workloads, HPE ProLiant DL110 Gen11 servers provide an open and flexible, virtualized foundation to deliver next-generation cellular connectivity to urban and rural Canadians. The servers provide Open RAN infrastructure to assist TELUS with the interoperability it needed to build a scalable, best-of-breed 5G network. HPE ProLiant Gen11 servers will provide the foundation for a Distributed Unit (DU) which is responsible for preparing data for transmission across the 5G network.

“Open RAN technology enables HPE’s telco customers the interoperability to design and manage their network with the equipment and software they desire,” said Phil Cutrone, senior vice president and general manager of Service Providers, OEM and Telco at HPE. “This is one example of why we are the infrastructure of choice for telco carriers worldwide. HPE enables success by providing the most energy efficient, open, and flexible solutions at the edge.”

Access to 5G networks is expected to transform worldwide data networks by enabling real-time internet of things (IoT) systems like immersive virtual reality and embedding artificial intelligence (AI) in business and consumer applications. Projections estimate 5G will triple network traffic by 20281. This includes demand from remote and rural businesses and consumers that have traditionally had limited access to data networks, as 5G communications are expected to enable their operations and communities to thrive.

“We are excited to elevate mobile communications for Canadians through the integration of our 5G network with Open RAN, which offers unmatched flexibility and diversity in services,” stated Nazim Benhadid, Chief Technology Officer at TELUS. “Partnering with HPE, we are constructing a next-generation network that lays the foundation for continuous innovation and success for both our business and consumer customers. Moreover, this HPE solution not only meets the performance requirements but also plays a pivotal role in our commitment to reducing energy intensity per terabyte of data traffic by 50% by 2030.”

HPE ProLiant Gen11 servers are purpose-built, ruggedized, and Network Equipment-Building System (NEBS)-compliant to enable an Open RAN solution. Providing a DU that frees TELUS from historical reliance on proprietary appliances enables the carrier to smoothly and flexibly integrate with other Open RAN 5G infrastructure components.

The HPE ProLiant DL110 Gen11 servers use AI-enabled innovation to distinguish between periods of high and low utilization, putting under-utilized infrastructure into an idle state without compromising latency or RAN network availability. The ability to optimize power consumption produces infrastructure power savings compared to existing Open RAN implementations.

About Hewlett Packard Enterprise

Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NYSE: HPE) is the global edge-to-cloud company that helps organizations accelerate outcomes by unlocking value from all of their data, everywhere. Built on decades of reimagining the future and innovating to advance the way people live and work, HPE delivers unique, open, and intelligent technology solutions as a service. With offerings spanning Cloud Services, Compute, High Performance Computing & AI, Intelligent Edge, Software, and Storage, HPE provides a consistent experience across all clouds and edges, helping customers develop new business models, engage in new ways, and increase operational performance. For more information, visit: www.hpe.com

1 Statista, 5G Statistics & Facts, January 26, 2024

Contacts

Kari Curto
kari.curto@hpe.com

Hewlett Packard Enterprise

NYSE:HPE

Release Summary
HPE is working with TELUS, which is building Canada’s first 5G open radio access network (Open RAN), by providing infrastructure across 3,000 sites.
Release Versions

Contacts

Kari Curto
kari.curto@hpe.com

More News From Hewlett Packard Enterprise

HPE Accelerates Secure, Scalable Production-ready AI Through New Innovations With NVIDIA

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--HPE (NYSE: HPE) today announced a significant expansion of the NVIDIA AI Computing by HPE portfolio, redefining how enterprises deploy, operationalize, and scale AI. Through its deep partnership and co-engineering with NVIDIA, HPE delivers an advanced portfolio of integrated and validated systems that speed time to value for AI while addressing scale, security, and governance requirements. “The AI race is fundamentally about speed, scale, and trust,” said Anto...

HPE Unveils Next-Generation AI Factory and Supercomputing Advancements with NVIDIA

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--NVIDIA GTC 2026 - HPE (NYSE: HPE) today announced significant innovations to the NVIDIA AI Computing by HPE portfolio focused on large-scale AI factories and supercomputers that enable customers to scale, deploy efficiently, and gain faster time-to-insight. The full-stack AI solutions with NVIDIA include tightly integrated compute, GPUs, networking, liquid cooling, software, and services designed for at-scale and sovereign environments. AI-forward organization...

HPE Drives Sovereign AI Leadership With Advanced Systems at National Research Centers: HLRS and Argonne National Laboratory

SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--NVIDIA GTC – HPE (NYSE:HPE) is helping customers advance sovereign AI initiatives worldwide by delivering robust, liquid-cooled sovereign AI systems that are part of the NVIDIA AI Computing by HPE portfolio. HPE will help build AI factories at Argonne National Laboratory in the United States and the High-Performance Computing Center Stuttgart (HLRS) in Germany, enabling governments, research institutions, and businesses to quickly deploy, operate, and scale AI...
Back to Newsroom