Nokia expands partnerships with TIM Brasil, Deutsche Telekom in AI technology push


Finnish technology and telecommunication company Nokia's headquarters in Espoo, Finland, October 28, 2025.Lehtikuva/Seppo Samuli via REUTERS

March 2 (Reuters) - Nokia said on ⁠Monday it was expanding partnerships with TIM Brasil and Deutsche Telekom, ⁠as the Finnish 5G gear maker seeks to capitalise on adoption of ‌AI-based technologies worldwide.

These deals, which follow last week's announcement of a multi-year contract with Telefonica to provide network solutions for data centres across Spain, highlight how artificial intelligence enabling technology is creating ​new revenue streams for Nokia.

It will expand the network ⁠partnership with TIM Brasil—which previously ⁠covered 5G network modernisation and its preparation for AI-based services in the state of ⁠Sao ‌Paulo—to a further 14 states across four regions, reaching around 42% of Brazil's population.

The partnership enables TIM Brasil to offer AI-driven services to ⁠business customers using Nvidia's AI-RAN platforms, Nokia said in a statement ​seen by Reuters ‌ahead of its scheduled publication.

In an earlier statement on Monday, Nokia and ⁠Deutsche Telekom said ​they would expand their collaboration to speed up development of cloud-based, disaggregated and AI-native radio access network (RAN) technology.

This will lay down building blocks for programmable and automated mobile networks ⁠that are simpler, faster and better optimised for ​future connectivity needs as a global AI boom reshapes the industry, they said.

These contracts reflect telecom operators' global race to upgrade their networks to 5G in order to ⁠enable broader AI adoption, creating a significant market for equipment providers like Nokia and Ericsson.

Last year, Nokia acquired U.S. optical networking firm Infinera, aiming to tap into the AI boom, a deal thatwas followed by a $1 billion equity investment from ​chipmaker Nvidia, which bought a 2.9% stake in the ⁠Finnish group.

The new deals fit into one of Nokia's largest restructuring efforts since selling ​its iconic mobile phone business more than a ‌decade ago, as it bets on AI and ​data centre demand to offset weak spending and contract losses in the 5G field.

(Reporting by Agnieszka Olenska in Gdansk, Editing by Milla Nissi-Prussak)

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