Nokia and NVIDIA Are Putting AI Inside Phone Masts. Here’s Why That Matters

On July 15, Nokia announced something it calls the industry’s first AI-native radio network platform. Built in partnership with NVIDIA, it is designed to pull more capacity out of existing phone masts without building new ones. For anyone who has ever stared at a loading spinner on a rural site, this matters.

What Actually Changed?

The short version: Nokia is putting NVIDIA GPUs inside mobile base stations and using AI software to manage radio signals more efficiently. The company says early tests show more than 20 percent improvement in spectral efficiency — that is the technical term for how much data you can squeeze through a given slice of radio spectrum. It is targeting 50 percent improvement by 2027 and 100 percent by 2028. At that point, operators could effectively double the capacity of the spectrum they already own without buying new frequencies.

Operators will buy it as a software subscription rather than a hardware upgrade. There are three deployment options: a plug-in card for existing Nokia sites, a standalone node, or a cloud-based version delivered through partners.

What This Means for Irish Businesses

Ireland’s mobile coverage is notoriously uneven. Urban areas are well served, but anyone running a business in a rural area — a farm, a workshop, a bed and breakfast — knows the frustration of patchy signal and slow data. AI-RAN technology is not a magic fix, but it changes the economics of coverage.

Right now, improving coverage means building new masts, which is expensive and slow. AI-RAN lets operators get more out of what they already have installed. That matters more in thinly populated areas where the revenue from a mast barely covers its running costs. If operators can double the capacity of an existing mast without building a new one, the economics of rural coverage improve significantly.

The Fine Print Worth Knowing

Nokia’s “industry first” claim is narrower than it sounds. Ericsson has been selling AI-in-radio software since June, and crucially, it runs on existing baseband hardware with no GPU required. Nokia’s path requires NVIDIA chips, which creates a dependency Ericsson has deliberately avoided.

And the headline numbers are targets, not results. The 20 percent figure is from tests, not live deployments. The 50 and 100 percent figures are ambitions for 2027 and 2028. Nokia expects pilot deployments by the end of this year and commercial availability in 2027.

The strategic bet is clear: Nokia has tied its radio future to NVIDIA, accepting a dependency on the world’s dominant AI chip supplier in exchange for a path it could not build alone. Whether that bet pays off for Irish users depends on whether operators here adopt the platform and whether the promised efficiency gains materialise in real conditions.

What to Watch For

If you are a business owner relying on mobile connectivity, the timing matters less than the direction. The industry is moving toward AI-managed networks that get more out of existing infrastructure. That trend benefits everyone outside major cities. Watch for mentions of AI-RAN in your mobile operator’s network upgrade plans over the next two years. That is the signal that the technology is moving from press releases to real towers.

In the meantime, the Nokia-NVIDIA partnership is worth watching as a case study in how AI is moving beyond chatbots and image generators into the physical infrastructure that keeps businesses connected.