Huawei is pushing forward with the launch of a new flagship smartphone in Europe even though Google apps and services may not be on offer, Reuters reported on Thursday, citing company executives.

Why it matters: The new 5G-capable Mate 30 is Huaweiโ€™s first flagship handset launch since the US government placed it on a trade blacklist in May. The new smartphone will not feature HarmonyOS, Huaweiโ€™s self-developed mobile operating system,  signaling that the worldโ€™s second-largest smartphone maker is not yet ready to break with Google.

  • Huawei can access the open-source version of Android without violating the US sanctions, but it barred from purchasing a license from Google to install popular apps such as YouTube and Google Maps on its phones.
  • It launched HarmonyOS earlier this month saying that while it is possible to install HarmonyOS on phones, the company has no plans to do so at present.
  • โ€œNo consumers in Europe would want a phone without Google services,โ€ Tiago Alves, vice president of Asia Pacific at Aptoide, a Portugal-based Android app store, told TechNode in a June interview.

Details: Huawei is set to unveil the Mate 30 line for phones on September 18 in Munich, Germany, according Reuters citing a source familiar with the matter, though it is unclear when the devices will go on sale.

  • Google, for the first time, confirmed that it cannot sell the license required to install its apps and services to Huawei due to the US ban.
  • A temporary reprieve from the US government last week does not apply to new products such as the Mate 30, according to the Google spokesperson.
  • Google declined to reveal whether it had applied for a license to resume supplies to Huawei, though it said before that it wants to continue businesses with the Chinese company.

โ€œOur new phones will still be based on Androidโ€ฆWe want to maintain one standard, one ecosystem, one technology.โ€

โ€”Vincent Pang, senior vice president and board director at Huawei

Context: Huawei smartphone sales in Europe tumbled 16% year on year in the second quarter, though it retained its position as the second-largest smartphone vendor in Europe with 8.5 million units shipped during the period ended June 30.

  • Huaweiโ€™s CEO of consumer business Richard Yu said in January that the company would overtake Samsung and become the worldโ€™s largest smartphone vendor by 2020.
  • In June, Huawei announced that it had given up on fulfilling this ambition because of the US sanctions following a Bloomberg report saying that the company was preparing for a 40% to 60% decline in international smartphone shipments.

Writing about semiconductors and telecommunications.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.