Nokia and Ericsson have agreed to open their respective automation ecosystems to each other in a move designed to accelerate deployment of autonomous mobile networks. The companies will cross-list automation applications across their Service Management and Orchestration (SMO) platforms, enabling communication service providers (CSPs) to deploy rApps across multivendor radio access network (RAN) environments.
Under the agreement, Ericsson will join Nokia’s SMO Marketplace, while Nokia will become a member of the Ericsson rApp Ecosystem built around the Ericsson Intelligent Automation Platform. The collaboration targets purpose-built RAN, cloud RAN, and Open RAN deployments, with a focus on interoperability via the R1 interface defined by the O-RAN Alliance. Both vendors said the initiative aims to give CSPs greater flexibility in selecting automation tools while preserving compatibility across heterogeneous network infrastructures.
The partnership centers on advancing AI-driven automation and promoting broader adoption of open standards in multivendor SMO environments. By aligning their rApp portfolios, Nokia and Ericsson intend to streamline deployment of intelligent applications that optimize network performance, reduce operational complexity, and support the industry’s push toward Level 4 autonomous network operations.
• Ericsson joins Nokia’s SMO Marketplace to offer its rApps within Nokia-managed multivendor environments
• Nokia joins Ericsson’s rApp Ecosystem tied to the Ericsson Intelligent Automation Platform
• Focus on interoperability through the O-RAN R1 interface between rApps and SMO
• Applies to purpose-built RAN, Cloud RAN, and Open RAN architectures
• Supports CSP migration toward Level 4 autonomous network operations
“This partnership with Ericsson marks a pivotal advancement in how the industry delivers the next generation of autonomous networks. By aligning on open frameworks and intelligent operational models, we are giving service providers a more adaptive and future-proof foundation for automation,” said Ari Kynaslahti, CTO at Nokia.
🌐 Analysis
rApps (RAN applications) are cloud-native software applications that operate at the non-real-time layer of the O-RAN architecture, typically running within the SMO. They use data analytics and AI/ML models to optimize network planning, energy efficiency, configuration management, and performance over longer time horizons. xApps, by contrast, run on the near-real-time RAN Intelligent Controller (near-RT RIC) and manage time-sensitive control functions such as traffic steering, interference management, and radio resource optimization. The xApp model emerged first within the O-RAN Alliance framework to disaggregate RAN control logic; rApps evolved as operators sought broader, AI-driven automation across lifecycle management and orchestration domains.
The Nokia–Ericsson agreement signals maturation of the rApp ecosystem beyond single-vendor implementations. As operators scale Open RAN and cloud RAN deployments, interoperability at the SMO and R1 interface level becomes critical to avoid fragmented automation stacks. By cross-listing rApps, the two largest RAN vendors acknowledge that multivendor AI-driven operations will require shared frameworks rather than proprietary silos, particularly as CSPs pursue higher levels of autonomous network capability.







