Rohde & Schwarz participates in 6G-ANNA, a lighthouse project to advance 6G in Germany

Saturday, 30 July 2022 04:32

 Rohde Schwarz participates in 6G ANNA a lighthouse project to advance 6G in Germany

Businesscafe - The three-year 6G-ANNA lighthouse project was initiated by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung, BMBF) and is led by Nokia.

With the combined effort of the 29 participating companies and research institutions, the consortium aims to advance the development, standardization and implementation of the upcoming new generation of mobile communications.


Rohde & Schwarz is contributing to the project by leveraging its already comprehensive research into 6G and related technologies.

While 5G is still being rolled out in Germany, the BMBF has already initiated plans to shape and implement 6G.


The new lighthouse project 6G-ANNA (6G Access, Network of Networks and Automation) is part of a larger “6G Platform Germany” initiative.


Started on July 1, 2022 for a duration of 3 years, the 6G-ANNA is led by Nokia and funded by the BMBF with 38.4 million Euros.


Rohde & Schwarz has joined the industry consortium as industry partner.


The consortium is formed by well-established companies such as Airbus, Bosch, Ericsson, Siemens and Vodafone as well as innovative start-ups, research institutes and distinguished universities.

Rohde & Schwarz has been closely involved in research beyond 5G and the development of 6G from the early beginnings and actively supports the ongoing fundamental research activities at 6G organizations, universities and research institutes across Europe, in the US and Japan.


The company is already well invested in researching different technologies which are expected to play a vital role in the development of 6G such as (sub-)THz communication, joint communication and sensing (JCAS), artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) or reconfigurable intelligent surfaces (RIS).


The first global specification of 6G is expected within the next six to eight years, and the commercial introduction of the technology is estimated to take place around 2030.

Last modified on Saturday, 30 July 2022 04:49